SKU: 4009078107
lemon lime prayer plant - maranta

lemon lime prayer plant - maranta Maranta 'Lemon Lime'

Sale price$18.77 Regular price$20.86
Save 10%

Shipping Estimate
USA
  • USA
  • CAN

Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 15 - Jul 20

Promo Codes Available:

For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15

Description

lemon lime prayer plant - maranta Maranta 'Lemon Lime'Maranta leuconeura 'Lemon Lime' Maranta leuconeura 'Lemon Lime' is a bright green prayer plant with lime to yellow green veins over deeper green leaves. It keeps the classic Maranta movement, with leaves that sit open in daylight and lift as light levels fall. The pattern stays green toned, with no red venation. This cultivar grows from shallow rhizomes into a low, spreading plant. It usually stays compact in height while gradually widening with new

Maranta leuconeura 'Lemon Lime'

Maranta leuconeura 'Lemon Lime' is a bright green prayer plant with lime to yellow-green veins over deeper green leaves. It keeps the classic Maranta movement, with leaves that sit open in daylight and lift as light levels fall. The pattern stays green-toned, with no red venation.

This cultivar grows from shallow rhizomes into a low, spreading plant. It usually stays compact in height while gradually widening with new stems and leaves. The soft leaf surface, fine roots, and moisture-sensitive growth need steady watering, warm conditions, and a pot size that does not hold excess water around the roots.

Lime-green veins on Maranta leuconeura Lemon Lime

  • Leaf colour: Deep green blades with lime-green to yellow-green venation.
  • Central pattern: Yellowish-green striping and a lighter central area define the bright leaf pattern.
  • Growth habit: Low, clump-forming, and spreading from shallow rhizomes.
  • Movement: Leaves fold upward at night and relax again by day.
  • Pot shape: Wider pots give the creeping stems room to fill outward as the plant matures.

Brazilian forest conditions for Maranta leuconeura Lemon Lime

Maranta leuconeura comes from wet tropical habitats in Brazil, where filtered light and organic, moisture-retentive ground layers shape its low growth. Indoors, 'Lemon Lime' needs bright indirect light, stable root moisture, warm temperatures, and an airy substrate.

Under bright indirect light, new leaves expand cleanly, while strong direct sun can mark the thin leaf surface. The plant expands by producing new leaves from basal and creeping growth points. Mature stems can loosen and trail when the pot fills, and trimmed sections with nodes can be rooted during active growth.

Care for Maranta leuconeura Lemon Lime

  • Light: Give bright indirect light or gentle filtered morning light. Avoid strong midday sun on the leaves.
  • Watering: Keep the substrate lightly and evenly moist, watering when roughly the top 20–35% has dried.
  • Water quality: Use rainwater, filtered water, or low-mineral water where possible, especially in areas with hard tap water.
  • Substrate: Use a moisture-retentive but aerated mix with coco coir, fine bark, perlite, and a small organic component.
  • Drainage: Use a pot with drainage and avoid compacted lower substrate, as fine Maranta roots need moisture and oxygen at the same time.
  • Humidity: Keep humidity around 50–60% for clean leaf expansion and fewer dry tips.
  • Temperature: Grow warm at 18–27°C and avoid cold surfaces below the pot, cold draughts, and wet substrate below about 15°C.
  • Feeding: Feed at low strength during active growth. Flush the substrate occasionally if fertilizer salts build up.
  • Repotting: Repot only when the roots have filled the current pot, moving up by one pot size.
  • Propagation: Propagate by division of rooted sections or by stem cuttings with nodes, kept warm and evenly moist while new roots form.
  • Mineral substrates: In semi-hydro or inert substrates, keep moisture steady, maintain warmth, and flush regularly to prevent mineral buildup around the fine roots.
  • Trimming: Remove yellow leaves and trim long stems above a node to encourage a denser pot.
  • Placement: Keep it away from hot glass, radiators, cold draughts, and exposed shelves where the soft leaves dry too quickly.
  • Growth rate: This Maranta usually spreads at a moderate pace in warmth and steady humidity, with slower side growth in cool or dry conditions.

Stress signs on Maranta leuconeura Lemon Lime leaves

  • Brown leaf tips: Check humidity, water quality, fertilizer strength, and repeated dry spells.
  • Yellowing leaves: Check for overwatering, poor drainage, compacted substrate, or cold wet roots.
  • Root rot risk: Soft stems, sour-smelling substrate, and collapsing lower growth point to wet roots and low oxygen around the rhizomes.
  • Faded leaf colour: Move the plant away from direct sun and check that new leaves are expanding under steady indirect light.
  • Curled leaves: Check substrate moisture first, then temperature and air dryness.
  • Leaf spots: Remove marked leaves if needed, keep the foliage from staying wet for long periods, and improve airflow around dense pots.
  • Pests: Check for spider mites, thrips, mealybugs, and scale-like pests around stems and leaf undersides. Fine webbing, pale speckling, sticky residue, or white clusters signal pests that can spread quickly through dry, crowded plant groups.

Pet-friendly handling for Maranta leuconeura Lemon Lime

Maranta leuconeura 'Lemon Lime' is generally regarded as pet-friendly and is not treated like calcium-oxalate aroids. Repeated chewing can damage the soft leaves and may upset a pet’s stomach, so keep it out of reach of animals that nibble plants.

The name behind Maranta leuconeura Lemon Lime

Maranta leuconeura É.Morren is an accepted species in Marantaceae and was published in 1874. The genus name Maranta honours Bartolomeo Maranta, a 16th-century Italian physician and botanist. The species epithet leuconeura refers to pale or white veining, reflected here in a lime-green vein network rather than red venation.

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 4009078107

Discover Niche Categories That Outsell lemon lime prayer plant - maranta

Top-Converting Item to Boost Your Average Order

4.2 ★★★★★
Based on 1592 reviews
Sort
Highest Rating
Newest First
Oldest First
Product Reviews
R
Verified Purchase
Reviewer
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 1
Fun while it lasts…
Color: Pink, Style: Grunt Sound
Fun while it lasts. Doesn’t last very long. This is our third one and last maybe a few weeks. The part that makes noise comes detached inside which causes to toy to no longer make noise, but also can be dangerous if it comes out.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2026
B
Verified Purchase
Betty Jo Bradley
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 4
Great alternative to the grunting pigs!
Color: Pink, Style: Grunt Sound
We go through A LOT of dog toys at my dog based business. The grunting pigs are super cute, but they are also super fragile. It is incredibly easy to dislodge the squeaker. (Grunter?) These are certainly not robust chew toys, but the squeaker is about 30% better at staying put than that of the pigs. It's also smaller, so it's easier for the smaller dogs to play with. These are a new favorite! Update: August, 2024 I bought an orange hedgehog. Amazon won't let me review that separately so I had to add to my sheep review. The orange hedgehog is only 3 stars. It is made of a harder plastic than the bear and the sheep. It also has a standard squeaker, not the grunting of the bear and sheep. But harder plastic DOES NOT mean that it will withstand an aggressive chewer! If your dog likes to "kill the squeaker" they will be able to do so in minutes! This IS NOT a chew toy! If you are looking for a toy for an aggressive chewer, look at the Orbeez line from Outward Hound. The other thing that makes me less enthusiastic about the orange hedgehog is that the yellow paint started flaking off immediately. I will have to scrub it all off because it looks terrible! The dogs don't care, but their owners sure do! I haven't had that problem with the sheep or the bears. The orange hedgehog is almost like it's from a completely different company!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2024
M
Verified Purchase
Maeberry
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 3
Cute
Color: Pink, Style: Grunt Sound
Really cute toy broke in a day and It stopped honking but my dog still plays with it. Durable material. Good toy overall. Please fix the honk and we can buy more like it.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2026
F
Verified Purchase
FL Sunshine
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
Great find for my dog!
Color: Hedgehog, Style: Big Squeak Hedgehog
This is a Big squeaking toy And has become a favorite of my dog. He is a big chewer but he won’t chew at this one he just carries it around and plays catch with it. I believe the little spikes keeps him from heavy chewing on it! Great find for us! But it is a loud squeak!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2026
N
Verified Purchase
nonigrams
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
For the love of a dog!
Color: Blue, Style: Tootiez Hedgehog, Color: Blue, Style: Tootiez Hedgehog
Okay, first - this toy is a hoot. When you first get it and hear it's cute grunting/tooting sound, you can't help but grin and think, Yup! That sounds like somebody in here just tooted! Which for some reason always does seem to be a bit funny, doesn't it? And you'll probably find yourself chuckling a little and saying, Oh how cute. After that, the next logical step is you'll introduce the toy to your dog. And then, depending on your dog's particular personality, you may soon discover (as we did) the amazing love/hate relationship a human can develop with a simple dog toy. We have a 1-yr-old standard poodle whom we named Kenda. And yes, he is named after Joe (for any of you ID fans out there). His official AKC registered name is Lieutenant Kenda, Home Inside Hunter. Corny? No doubt. But it truly seemed an appropriate name for him, because this is the first dog we've ever owned that actually LOVES to play with dog toys and will endlessly hunt them down throughout the house. No toy, however well hidden, stands a chance with this determined toy hunter. As Joe might say, he WILL find you! :) His toys are his friends, and he is fiercely devoted to them. Enter the adorable little rubber hedgehog with his even more adorable "toot". The moment Kenda laid eyes (or ears?) on this little guy, all other toys were forgotten. It was love at first sight. So much so that within a few hours of him playing with this toy to the exclusion of all others, we decided to give him a name. We call him "Blue" (I know, we're so creative). Blue immediately became Kenda's best friend - or at least his best toy. He played with him constantly. He bit him, he wrestled with him, he chewed on him. He brought Blue to us and, if we were sitting down, very carefully placed this slobbery ball of rubber in our laps, as if asking, Can we play catch with Blue? Huh? Pretty please?? Sometimes we did, sometimes we didn't. On those occasions when we didn't, he would play catch with himself, picking Blue up in his mouth, swinging his head, and tossing him across the kitchen; then running/sliding across the kitchen floor to retrieve him on the other side of the room. In the beginning, if Blue was nowhere in sight (and with dogs, out of sight is usually out of mind), the hubby and I would get a kick out of saying, "Kenda, where's Blue?!" Just for the enormous fun of watching a 55-pound poodle suddenly leap a foot in the air, scramble his legs mid-air like Fred Flintstone getting his car started, then half running/half sliding across the kitchen hardwood floor in a desperate effort to find his beloved Blue. Oh, how we entertained ourselves in those early days watching Kenda with his Blue. And through it all, through every bite, squeeze, toss, push, throw, and chew of this toy.......the toot. The grunt. Okay, let's call it what it really sounds like, folks: a FART, okay? There, I've said it. It sounds like your grandpa just passed gas - bigtime. Funny? At first, yes. Hilarious. But a thousand times a day? Over and over and over? While you're trying to talk on the phone? While you're trying to have conversation with each other over coffee at the end of the day? Sometimes for an hour NON-STOP? Well, let's just say the humor of it all began to elude us a bit. And therein lies our love/hate relationship with this adorable little toy. We thought we'd died and gone to heaven one day when Blue stopped tooting. Turns out Kenda had chewed on him so much his tooter (located rather anatomically correctly in his tushie) had fallen out. Or rather IN, since it was now in Blue's tummy. Poor Blue, he couldn't make noise anymore, and although Kenda kept playing with him you could tell he was confused as to why his little buddy had fallen silent and wouldn't "talk" to him anymore. And as much as the hubby and I were enjoying the tooting reprieve, we couldn't take it. By the third silent day, I could almost feel the invisible hands of Amazon coaxing me toward my computer, gently urging me to buy another Blue. But I resisted, folks. I did NOT buy another Blue. I bought TWO more Blues! One for now, and one for that possible future day when this Blue, too, falls silent. Why? Because ... well, because it's BLUE! He's practically a member of the family now. The dog loves Blue, and we love the dog. I guess it's that simple. My final word on this dog toy? It's adorable. It's well made and will hold up to a ton of play and chewing. His tooter may not survive as long; I guess that remains to be seen. And if your dog is anything like mine, well then your sanity may take a hit as well. But if your dog loves his little hedgehog buddy as ours does, and if you love your dog (and you know you do!), then you might decide your sanity is worth the risk. Two thumbs way, WAY up! P.S. Blue now has a friend. We just bought the pink sheep. Kenda is in 7th heaven. Our house sounds like a retirement home after a chili bean supper. And yes, we named him "Pink". I told you - we are nothing if not creative.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2018

recommand products