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🌱 Burlemarx Philodendron

πŸ”¬ Philodendron burle-marxii Β· πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§ Family: Araceae Β· 🌍 Origin: Brazil

About Burlemarx Philodendron

Philodendron burle-marxii is a tropical aroid grown for its narrow, glossy green leaves and compact, spreading to climbing habit. It is cultivated as an indoor foliage plant and also used outdoors as a groundcover in frost-free climates; like many Philodendron, its sap contains irritating calcium oxalate crystals.

🌱 Detailed Care Guide

β˜€οΈ Light: 🌀️ Partial Sun
πŸ’§ Watering: surface, soaking
πŸ’¦ Humidity: 70%
🌑️ Temperature: Ideal: 24Β°C β€’ Min: 15Β°C β€’ Max: 35Β°C
βš™οΈ Maintenance: βœ… Easy
🌱 Substrate: perlite, clay_pebbles

πŸ“ Growth & Structure

πŸ“ Height: 45 cm
↔️ Wingspan: 90 cm
πŸ”„ Life Cycle: perennial
πŸƒ Foliage: evergreen
🌿 Seasons: spring, summer

πŸ“… Phenology

🌱 Sowing: january, february, march
🌸 Flowering: june
🍎 Fruiting: september

🌍 Ecology

🌿 Biodiversity Role: green manure
πŸ¦‹ Pollinators: beetle, fly

✨ Usage & Benefits

  • ornamental

⚠️ Safety & Traits

πŸ‘€ Human Toxicity: slightly toxic
🐾 Pet Toxicity: slightly toxic
⚠️ Allergens: calcium oxalate crystals

🌱 Propagation

🌱 Propagation: cutting, clump division, layering
🌰 Sowing Method: greenhouse, tray, pot
πŸͺ΄ Transplanting: βœ…

πŸ§ͺ Soil & Nutrition

πŸ§ͺ Fertilizer: liquid fertilizer, granular fertilizer
⚑ Nutrient Needs: nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium

πŸ› Pests & Diseases

πŸ› Pests: Spider mites, Mealybugs, Scale insects, Thrips, Aphids
🦠 Diseases: Bacterial leaf spot (Xanthomonas), Bacterial soft rot (Erwinia/Dickeya), Root rot (Pythium/Phytophthora), Leaf spot

πŸ“ Expert Advice

🌱 Soil Advice:

Use a fast-draining, airy aroid mix to mimic humid forest-floor conditions: combine potting soil with coarse bark and perlite, plus some sphagnum moss or coconut fiber for moisture retention. Ensure strong drainage (e.g., clay pebbles at the base or throughout the mix) and avoid compacted, waterlogged media.

🌾 Sowing Advice:

Propagation is most reliable from stem cuttings or division rather than seed. For cuttings, take a section with at least one node (and ideally an aerial root), place in moist sphagnum/perlite or a well-aerated aroid mix, keep warm (about 22–28Β°C) with high humidity and bright indirect light until rooted, then pot on. If sowing fresh seed, sow indoors in a sterile, fine, consistently moist medium; cover lightly, maintain warmth and high humidity, and provide bright indirect light.

πŸ§ͺ Fertilizer Advice:

Feed during active growth (spring–summer) with a balanced, complete houseplant fertilizer applied at low concentration; reduce frequency in autumn and pause or greatly reduce in winter. Flush the pot occasionally with plain water to limit salt buildup, especially when using granular fertilizers.

πŸ‚ Mulching Advice:

Top-dress the pot with a thin layer of bark/wood chips or clay pellets to slow evaporation and stabilize moisture; keep mulch off the stems/crown to reduce rot risk and avoid sealing the surface so tightly that gas exchange is reduced.

πŸ—οΈ Staking Advice:

Support is not required for a compact, creeping habit. If grown as a climber for larger leaves, train stems onto a moss pole or plank and secure loosely with soft ties; keep the pole slightly moist to encourage aerial-root attachment.

βœ‚οΈ Pruning:

Prune to control size and encourage branching; remove yellowing or damaged leaves at the base of the petiole. Leggy stems can be cut back to a node; pruned sections can be used as propagation material.

Tags: #Philodendron burle-marxii#philodendron#aroid#Araceae#tropical#evergreen#foliage-plant#houseplant#indoor-plant#shade-tolerant#low-light-tolerant#bright-indirect-light

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