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Description
anthurium feuille marron Anthurium esmeraldense – Large Leathery Strap LeavesAnthurium esmeraldense Long green petioles carry the broad, velvety blades of Anthurium esmeraldense, an Ecuadorian Anthurium species with leaves that sit between cordate and sagittate in outline. The upper leaf surface is dark green and velvety, while the lower side can show a reddish green tone with a softer gloss. The plant grows from a short crown with persistent cataphylls and can behave as an epiphyte or subshrub. Indoors, that structure points
Anthurium esmeraldense
Long green petioles carry the broad, velvety blades of Anthurium esmeraldense, an Ecuadorian Anthurium species with leaves that sit between cordate and sagittate in outline. The upper leaf surface is dark green and velvety, while the lower side can show a reddish green tone with a softer gloss.
The plant grows from a short crown with persistent cataphylls and can behave as an epiphyte or subshrub. Indoors, that structure points to an airy root zone, a pot that drains freely, and enough open space around the leaves so the long petioles and wide blades are not pressed against shelves or neighbouring plants.
Velvety foliage details in Anthurium esmeraldense
- Leaf shape: Broad cordate to sagittate blades with a pronounced base and extended tip.
- Surface detail: Dark green, velvety upper leaves with a softer reddish green tone beneath.
- Growth structure: Short-stemmed crown with long green petioles and persistent cataphylls.
- Natural habit: Epiphyte or subshrub from wet tropical Ecuadorian habitat.
- Indoor structure: Long petioles and broad leaves need open space around the crown.
How Anthurium esmeraldense settles into a pot
The long petioles give Anthurium esmeraldense an open, upright-to-spreading outline. A stable pot helps the plant hold its leaf weight evenly, while a chunky aroid mix keeps air moving around the roots after watering. The crown should sit above the substrate line, with old cataphyll material kept dry enough to prevent the base from staying wet for long periods.
Its velvety leaf surface is sensitive to harsh sun and rough contact. Give each new blade space to expand fully, and avoid placing the leaves where they rub against walls, glass, plant supports, or other pots.
Care setup for Anthurium esmeraldense
- Light: Bright filtered light keeps the long-petioled growth compact enough for indoor culture while reducing scorch risk on the velvety blades.
- Watering: Water thoroughly, then let the upper part of the mix become lightly dry before watering again. The root zone should stay lightly moist, never dense or stagnant.
- Substrate: Use an open aroid mix with bark, coarse fibre, perlite, pumice, or similar mineral structure so water drains through quickly.
- Humidity: Moderate to high humidity reduces edge stress and lets new velvety leaves expand without sticking.
- Temperature: Keep it in warm indoor conditions and protect the roots from cold, wet substrate.
- Placement: Leave room around the crown and petioles so the wide blades can open without mechanical damage.
Leaf and crown stress in Anthurium esmeraldense
- Soft crown or sour substrate: Usually points to a mix that stays too wet around the short stem and roots.
- Brown leaf edges: Can follow dry air, irregular watering, or root stress in a compacted potting mix.
- Pale scorch patches: Direct sun can mark the velvety leaf surface, especially through glass.
- Torn or bent leaves: Wide blades and long petioles need more clearance than compact rosette plants.
- Slow new growth: Check warmth, root aeration, and moisture balance before increasing watering frequency.
Handling safety for Anthurium esmeraldense
Anthurium esmeraldense is not pet-safe. Like other Anthurium species, it contains calcium oxalate crystals that can irritate the mouth, throat, skin, and eyes if chewed or handled roughly. Keep it away from pets and small children.
Botanical background of Anthurium esmeraldense
Anthurium esmeraldense Sodiro was first published in Anales de la Universidad Central del Ecuador 19: 337 (1905). It belongs to Araceae and is native to Ecuador, where it grows in wet tropical conditions as an epiphyte or subshrub. The genus name Anthurium comes from Greek roots meaning flower and tail, referring to the spadix typical of the genus.
A warm, humid, airy setup gives Anthurium esmeraldense room for its long petioles and velvety sagittate leaves.
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