SKU: 37607471400
monstera adansonii yellow edges

monstera adansonii yellow edges Monstera adansonii Aurea

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Description

monstera adansonii yellow edges Monstera adansonii AureaMonstera adansonii variegata 'Aurea' Monstera adansonii variegata 'Aurea' brings yellow toned variegation to the Swiss cheese vine. Its green leaves can show lime, chartreuse or golden yellow sections, with the same narrow adansonii blade shape and oval fenestrations. The warm yellow tones give the leaves a golden green look, especially as new growth hardens and the contrast becomes clearer. The plant grows from a flexible vine with nodes and aerial

Monstera adansonii variegata 'Aurea'

Monstera adansonii variegata 'Aurea' brings yellow-toned variegation to the Swiss cheese vine. Its green leaves can show lime, chartreuse or golden-yellow sections, with the same narrow adansonii blade shape and oval fenestrations. The warm yellow tones give the leaves a golden-green look, especially as new growth hardens and the contrast becomes clearer.

The plant grows from a flexible vine with nodes and aerial roots. A supported stem keeps nodes aligned and prevents long trailing sections from tangling. Because yellow variegated tissue contains less chlorophyll than green tissue, yellow-heavy vines often grow more slowly, especially when roots are recently disturbed.

Monstera adansonii 'Aurea' key features

  • Colour: Yellow, lime or golden variegation over green fenestrated foliage.
  • Leaves: Narrow adansonii blades with natural oval holes.
  • Stem: Vining growth with nodes, aerial roots and flexible training options.
  • Growth pace: Often slower than green Monstera adansonii when the variegation is heavy.

Yellow variegation and vine growth

Monstera adansonii comes from tropical American forest habitats, where it grows as a climbing aroid. 'Aurea' keeps that same vining structure indoors. The stem produces leaves one node at a time, and each new leaf can carry a different balance of green and yellow tissue.

Yellow sections are more delicate than fully green leaf areas. They can mark from intense sun, irregular watering or a stressed root zone. A stable position, open substrate and careful watering reduce dry brown marks on yellow sections while the vine develops.

Flowering indoors is uncommon. Mature Monstera adansonii can produce a spathe and spadix under suitable tropical conditions; indoor plants usually remain foliage vines with yellow-variegated leaves.

Care for yellow-variegated Monstera adansonii

  • Light: Place in bright indirect light. Shield yellow sections from intense midday sun, especially behind hot glass.
  • Watering: Let the upper half of the pot dry before watering again. Do not leave the root ball cold and saturated.
  • Substrate: Choose an open aroid mix with bark, coco chunks and pumice or perlite for drainage and root oxygen.
  • Temperature: Maintain 18–27 °C where possible. Cold wet roots can lead to yellowing and dark leaf marks.
  • Humidity: Moderate to higher humidity keeps thin new leaves from drying at the edges as they expand.
  • Training: Start the vine on a pole, plank or trellis before the stem becomes long and tangled.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly enough to avoid salt buildup on yellow leaves; a small regular dose is safer than a strong monthly charge.
  • Pruning: Cut above a node to control length or root cuttings. Keep cuttings with a growth point and enough green tissue.
  • Repotting: Shift to fresh open mix when roots are dense at the pot edge, keeping the yellow-variegated vine in a modest container.

Common Monstera adansonii 'Aurea' problems

  • Dry brown yellow areas: Check sun exposure, watering gaps, humidity and fertiliser strength.
  • Whole leaves turning yellow: Inspect the roots and potting mix. Dense wet substrate can reduce oxygen around the root system.
  • Little new growth: Check warmth, root health and green leaf area. Very yellow growth can move more slowly.
  • Thin extended stems: Increase bright indirect light and give the vine a support to climb.
  • Damaged new leaves: Look for pests, dry unfurling conditions or root stress before cutting fresh growth.

Pet and child safety

Monstera adansonii variegata 'Aurea' contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals. Chewed leaves or stems can irritate the mouth, throat and digestive tract, so keep the plant and pruning waste away from pets and children.

Botanical name and Aurea meaning

Monstera adansonii Schott is an accepted species in Araceae. Monstera is linked with unusual leaf forms in the genus, and adansonii honours French botanist Michel Adanson. Aurea is Latin for golden, matching the yellow tone of the variegation.

Each node can carry a different yellow-green balance, so Monstera adansonii variegata 'Aurea' develops with natural variation along the stem.

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4.0 ★★★★★
Based on 7 reviews
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Verified Purchase
Talagand
Draper, US
★★★★★ 4
Reasonably adequate room divider
Size: 4 Panel-88'', Color: Beige
I'm reviewing this as I assemble it. Couple things: 1. I didn't expect as much assembly. I've ordered dividers before and they more-or-less came as one unit. Sometimes the panels needed screwing together. These require complete assembly and come largely as three rods: two make up vertical columns and snap together. Another one (called part "C") makes the horizontal columns and you have two of these per panel (one attaches to part "A" and the other part "B"). These parts are metal with a plastic shim. Using the wood screws to attach to part "C" is a real pain in the neck. There's not much holding the panel in place so it's a little tricky. One tactic I've found while I'm assembling that works for the initial connections from parts A and B to their respective "C" rods is to hold the screw in place with a screw driver and then rotating the rod around the screw. This will do a number on your hands if you aren't wearing gloves. This obviously doesn't work when completing the connection. Using a driller driver on this is really near impossible because there isn't anything you can use to secure it in place. You can use it on the first panel, but as it gets longer, it becomes increasingly difficult and because it isn't wood, it's really tight. I considered drilling larger pilot holes but since there are only 4x4=16 screws I need to screw in, I just decided to use my screw driver to complete it. 2. Also related to assembly. When completing the panels (attaching parts "A" and "B" to parts "C" that have the cloth cover on it), you have to be careful that when you tighten that side that it isn't loosening the other side. Because the pilot holes are so tight, you can end up rotating the rod, which rotates it in the same direction as looser on the original side. Having someone hold the "C" rod in place while you screw it in is probably the easiest approach. I didn't have a 2nd person, so I just had to keep flipping back and forth and tightening both sides as I screwed it in. Not the worlds biggest deal, but annoying nonetheless. 3. The way the instructions are written, they seem to suggest building this thing progressively; that is, you do panel 1, then 2, connect them together, then do 3 and connect it, etc. I took a different route that I suspect saved me quite a bit of trouble, and I assembled all four panels first and THEN connected everything together. 4. For the love of God make sure you check that the plastic tip is on the same side for every panel. Otherwise, you have to take one side apart again and reverse it. On the bright side, if this happens, you've essentially bored out the pilot holes to be the correct size... which is having me question if I shouldn't have just bored them out to the appropriate width in the first place. 5. Attaching all of the panels together is also an enormous pain in the ass unless you happen to have an 88" long elevated surface. Attaching the legs either requires you to elevate one side, which will invariably twist the inexplicably cheap material in the bottom connectors... or you can attach them sideways... or you can put this thing upright, having two people hold the panels in place while you use the allen wrench to tighten the bolts on the underside. None of those are particularly great options. NOW on to the utility itself. 1. The panels do let some light through (I didn't believe their advertising, and that was one of the reasons that I bought beige, is that I wanted it to not be too dark). They aren't transparent though, so it isn't that far off from their description. They functionally work great, and keep the mess of wires hidden and when I'm sitting at my desk, actually reflect quite a bit of light into my office. Great! 2. My wife has described these as "the most hideous piece of furniture ever conceived of by man." So it does not have spouse approval factor. Granted, she will seldom be in my office area, so that isn't the end of the world. 3. These are really hard to align in a way that doesn't look a little tacky. There are some plastic connectors but they don't do a bang up job of keeping these in place. Each panel is slightly tilted and it's... quite obvious. I may at some point make my own improvements to these to help make them more level. It's not a particularly expensive product so I wasn't expecting much so it's fine and I'm not going to ding them on the rating because of it. All said, would I buy this product again? Probably not. It's assembly was ~90 minutes which is about 75 minutes longer than I was anticipating spending on this (not including the 5 minute writeup that I'm doing here). But am I going to return it? Also no, if for no other reason I'd be just as annoyed taking it apart and putting it in the original box to return it.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 31, 2023
B
Verified Purchase
Ben F.
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Good product, poor directions.
Color: Black, Size: B-88''W-4 Panel
The quality of the product was better than most at this price. The directions could have been much better even though I have an engineering background.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2025
D
Verified Purchase
Deb J
Houston, US
★★★★★ 4
Nice partition for my basement
Color: Beige, Size: B-102''-3 Panel
This 3-panel room divider showed up well-packaged with all the parts and even a little tool for putting it together. The instructions were easy to follow, and while one person can definitely assemble it, having two makes it quicker and less frustrating. It does exactly what I needed—gives quick, easy coverage in an open area. I'm using it in my basement to hide the furnace and water heater, and it works great for that. It looks nice overall, but I picked the beige fabric (which is really more of a tan), and the black frame makes it stand out more than I’d like. A white or lighter frame would’ve blended better. Not sure that I would use it anywhere besides the basement It’s lightweight and pretty sturdy. The wheels make it easy to move, but it does get a bit wobbly, and the panel clips need to be readjusted every time you roll it somewhere new. Still, for the price, it’s a solid buy. I’m happy with it and planning to order another one.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2025
T
TexNewMex
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Fantastic
Color: Beige, Size: A-132''W-6 Panel
I am perennially in the process of rearranging, reorganizing, getting ready for yard sales, changing the functions of various rooms, moving everything out of a room to do a deep clean, etc, which means that there is always SOME part of my house, if not the entire thing, that is a disaster zone. Having someone knock on my door triggers a "duck and cover" reflex because it's so embarrassing for anyone to see that I live like this. (I *feel* like I don't, really, because I know that all the various stages are all temporary, but when there's always something temporary going on, it might as well be permanent, you know?) So THANK HEAVENS for a room divider that is not only large enough to divide my uncomfortably long den in half the long way so I can shove all the messy parts up against the back wall -- that is not only simple and attractive and neutral and (this is important) NOT BLACK because I have multiple pets and anything black in this house will be pet-hair-colored within 20 seconds -- that not only has **SIX** panels for lots of options of how I want to divide the space/s -- but is also on WHEELS. Someone out there really does love me, it's true! The panels are stable *enough* - I'm not going to lie and say that nothing is going to knock them over, because I have some balance issues, and I also have cats, and both of those circumstances has resulted in a mess on at least one occasion. But in the cats' defense, they've never dealt with a room partition that didn't hang from the ceiling before; and in my defense, I just grabbed the first thing I could reach on the way down. Not the product's fault in either case. Assembly was a little dicey as I am currently in **bilateral** (oh yes, that's fun) wrist braces, so I had to give up until I had help. But I think if you're able-bodied, you shouldn't have any difficulty. The only down side is, now that I've hidden away all the mess so I can break out the holiday decorations, you know what happens next, right?? That's right... the PERMA-MESS ZONE. Oh no. Oh well. Full item name: Room Divider 132''W Wall Divider for Room Partition (Heavy Duty Base) 6 Panel Partition Room Dividers, Freestanding Room Divider Screen Separation W/Wheel Folding Privacy Screen Panel Space Separator (six panels, beige)
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Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2025
E
Verified Purchase
E. Leon
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 3
Difficult assembly, doesn’t fold well, looks good fully open
Color: Grey, Size: B-88''W-4 Panel
The instructions for this divider are very inadequate. After having to redo parts of the assembly, I have finally assembled it. The divider itself seems very nice when it is fully open, however it is not possible to fold it well as all the bars with the wheels go in various directions making it impossible to fold it neatly. And it has a large footprint. It is possible that I did not assemble it fully well because of the lack of adequate instructions. I am not even sure if I will keep it because I need to fold out of the way when nothing in use.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2026

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