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Description
anthurium palmate lea Anthurium podophyllum – Deeply Divided Pedatisect LeavesAnthurium podophyllum Anthurium podophyllum is a Mexican Anthurium with broad, palmately divided leaves that open into a hand shaped outline. Mature blades divide into lobes held on upright petioles, giving the plant a clear divided leaf profile. The species is native to Veracruz and Oaxaca and can grow as a subshrub or epiphyte in seasonally dry tropical biome. In cultivation, it needs bright filtered light, warmth and a coarse mix that drains well
Anthurium podophyllum
Anthurium podophyllum is a Mexican Anthurium with broad, palmately divided leaves that open into a hand-shaped outline. Mature blades divide into lobes held on upright petioles, giving the plant a clear divided-leaf profile.
The species is native to Veracruz and Oaxaca and can grow as a subshrub or epiphyte in seasonally dry tropical biome. In cultivation, it needs bright filtered light, warmth and a coarse mix that drains well between waterings.
Mexican palmate foliage
- Leaf shape: Leaves are divided into broad lobes that give the blade a palmate, hand-like outline.
- Growth habit: It can grow as a subshrub or epiphyte, with leaves carried on upright to spreading petioles.
- Origin: It is native to Veracruz and Oaxaca in Mexico.
- Root zone: A coarse mix keeps water moving through the pot and reduces dense wet conditions around the roots.
- Leaf development: Young or stressed plants may produce simpler leaves before stronger division appears.
- Pot behaviour: Erect-spreading petioles need space so mature leaves can open cleanly.
Leaf spread and substrate needs
Anthurium podophyllum develops foliage with broad lobes arranged from the leaf blade into a palmate shape. The petioles hold the leaves outward and upward, so the plant needs enough room around the pot for the leaf shape to be visible and for new blades to unfold cleanly.
After watering, the substrate should hold some moisture while draining quickly as the top layer begins to dry. A coarse aroid mix reduces the risk of compact, wet conditions around the roots.
Care setup for Anthurium podophyllum
- Light: Give bright filtered light for sturdy petioles and well-sized leaves. Direct midday sun can scorch exposed lobes.
- Substrate: Use an airy aroid mix with bark, coarse fibre and mineral material so water drains through the pot quickly.
- Watering: Water thoroughly, then wait until the upper layer of substrate is lightly dry before watering again.
- Pot size: Use a pot that gives the roots air and gives the petioles enough balance as the leaves widen.
- Humidity: Moderate to high humidity helps new lobed leaves unfold without sticking at the margins.
- Temperature: Keep it warm and away from cold draughts. Chilled wet roots can decline quickly.
- Cleaning: Dust can settle along the lobes; wipe leaves gently with a soft damp cloth.
- Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth, then flush the pot if fertiliser salts collect.
Problems with divided leaves and roots
- Less divided leaves: Immature growth, low light or root stress can produce smaller blades with weaker lobing.
- Weak petioles: Very low light can lead to stretched growth and leaves that lean instead of holding outward.
- Brown edges: Check for direct sun, hard drying, mineral build-up or irregular watering.
- Root decline: Compact substrate that stays wet can damage roots and slow new growth.
- Pests: Inspect the undersides of the lobes and the petiole bases for thrips, spider mites and scale.
Pet safety for Anthurium podophyllum
Anthurium podophyllum is not pet-safe. The plant contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals, which can irritate the mouth, throat and stomach if the foliage or stem tissue is chewed. Keep it out of reach of pets and children.
Botanical notes on Anthurium podophyllum
Anthurium podophyllum is an accepted species in Araceae and was published in 1841. Its native range is in Veracruz and Oaxaca, Mexico, where it occurs as a subshrub or epiphyte in seasonally dry tropical biome. Grow it warm and bright in a loose substrate that drains well and keeps air around the roots.
With maturity, Anthurium podophyllum develops broader divided blades that open into a clear hand-shaped outline on upright petioles.
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