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anthurium warocqueanum temperature

anthurium warocqueanum temperature Anthurium warocqueanum

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Description

anthurium warocqueanum temperature Anthurium warocqueanumAnthurium warocqueanum Anthurium warocqueanum, often known as Queen Anthurium, is a Colombian epiphytic Anthurium with long, pendant velvet leaves and pale veins running through the blade. Young plants start with shorter, upright foliage, then gradually develop elongated leaves that give mature plants a vertical hanging form. The plant grows from a central stem and produces leaves that hang downward as they mature. A raised pot, tall plant stand or

Anthurium warocqueanum

Anthurium warocqueanum, often known as Queen Anthurium, is a Colombian epiphytic Anthurium with long, pendant velvet leaves and pale veins running through the blade. Young plants start with shorter, upright foliage, then gradually develop elongated leaves that give mature plants a vertical hanging form.

The plant grows from a central stem and produces leaves that hang downward as they mature. A raised pot, tall plant stand or stable vertical anchor keeps the blades clear of shelves and neighbouring plants.

Anthurium warocqueanum foliage profile

  • Growth habit: Epiphytic Anthurium with a central stem and long pendant leaves.
  • Leaf form: Narrow, elongated heart-shaped blades that lengthen noticeably with maturity.
  • Texture: Velvet green surface with a soft appearance and marked sensitivity to abrasion.
  • Venation: Pale veins run lengthwise through the blade and become more striking on larger leaves.
  • Placement: Raised placement gives mature foliage room to hang below the pot.

Origin, morphology and growth behaviour

Anthurium warocqueanum is an accepted species in the Araceae family. It is native to Colombia and grows in the wet tropical biome as an epiphyte. Its roots are adapted to a moist but aerated environment around tree surfaces, which is why container culture needs both humidity and excellent oxygen flow through the substrate.

The leaves can become very long under stable, warm, humid conditions, but their quality depends heavily on root health and consistent leaf expansion. A plant with active roots, filtered light and steady humidity usually produces cleaner, longer blades.

Care for Anthurium warocqueanum

  • Light: Give bright filtered light. The plant needs enough light for strong leaf production, while direct midday sun can scorch the soft surface.
  • Watering: Keep the substrate evenly moist, then let the upper layer begin to dry before watering again. The roots need moisture and air at the same time.
  • Substrate: Use a coarse epiphyte-style aroid mix with bark, chunky fibre, pumice or perlite. Fine, compacted mixes increase root-loss risk.
  • Humidity: Aim for 70–85% humidity for the cleanest leaf expansion. Air movement is important in enclosed cabinets or grow tents.
  • Temperature: Keep warm, ideally 21–28 °C. Avoid cold nights and a wet root zone, especially during slower growth.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth with a complete fertiliser. Large leaves respond better to steady low-level nutrition than irregular strong doses.
  • Support: A moss pole, plank or stable stake can help the stem stay upright while leaves hang downward from the crown.
  • Pot setup: Use a pot with generous drainage and enough weight to balance the pendant foliage. A raised position keeps mature blades clear of shelves and pot edges.
  • Repotting: Repot carefully before the substrate breaks down. Disturbed roots can slow the next leaf, so keep healthy roots intact where possible.
  • Outdoor summer placement: In warm European summer weather, move only acclimated plants to a sheltered, shaded position when nights stay above 18 °C.

Common signals in Queen Anthurium

  • Crisped leaf edges: Check humidity stability, airflow and fertiliser concentration. Long leaves lose quality quickly under dry or salty conditions.
  • Yellowing lower leaves: Inspect the roots and substrate. Older leaves often decline when the lower mix has become stale or waterlogged.
  • Short new leaves: Review light, root mass and temperature. Weak roots usually show through reduced leaf length.
  • Torn or stuck new growth: Keep humidity steady while a leaf is emerging and give the new blade space to unfurl.
  • Stem leaning: Add support early. A mature leaf can pull the crown forward if the stem has no vertical anchor.

Anthurium warocqueanum is easier to manage once light, moisture and stem anchoring stay consistent. Keep conditions steady while a new leaf is expanding, then adjust only after the blade has hardened.

Anthurium warocqueanum safety notes

Anthurium warocqueanum should be kept away from pets and children that may chew plant material. Its tissues contain insoluble calcium oxalate crystals that can irritate the mouth and throat if chewed or swallowed. Keep it away from pets and small children, and handle cut tissue with care.

Anthurium warocqueanum name background

The accepted botanical name is Anthurium warocqueanum T.Moore, in the family Araceae. The genus name Anthurium refers to the tail-like spadix. The species epithet warocqueanum honours the Belgian horticultural patron Arthur Warocqué.

Anthurium warocqueanum matures into long pendant velvet leaves with pale venation and a clear vertical hanging form.

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Annie
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
Emotional development...
Format: Hardcover
Cattywampus Ash Van Otterloo This is the story of Delpha McGill, a girl that doesn’t like rules or keeping secrets. Delpha lives in a small town in rural Appalachia, Howler’s Hollow, where magic is not permitted. She discovers her grandmother’s hidden book of spells which she is determined to use to help her mother. Katybird Hearn has her own reasons for wanting to get her hands on the book of spells and has resolved nobody is going to stand in her way. She comes from a long line of witches. In the midst of their squabble, they unintentionally allow a curse to escape. The curse is so evil it wakes their dead ancestors, the Hearns and the McGills, The two girls must learn to work together if they are going to save the town from the zombies. The author uses great sensitivity in incorporating androgen insensitivity in the plot. Androgen insensitivity syndrome is a condition that affects sexual development before birth and during puberty. People with this condition are genetically male, with one X chromosome and one Y chromosome in each cell. Because their bodies are unable to respond to certain male sex hormones (called androgens), they may have mostly female external sex characteristics or signs of both male and female sexual development. Poverty, sorcery, fears, friendship, and ignorant biases are all a part of this book. Author Ash Van Otterloo portrays life in a southern country town in the mountains and he does so without being demeaning or patronizing. The characters are well fleshed out. While magic is part of the plot, it is merely a means to showcase the emotional development of the two girls. This is a fast-paced read. The target audience is 10-13 years of age.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 15, 2021
L
Lisa Tobleman
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 4
Fun if a bit offbeat upper elementary fantasy
Format: Hardcover
I read this in one afternoon and have to say I enjoyed it. The cast of characters are incredibly diverse, and for the most part this is a believable story (despite the undead magicians and ridiculous outhouse) This story is a "Hatfields vs McCoys" if the two hillbilly families were magicians and were feuding over how they practice instead of over moonshine and land. This brings me to my first gripe with the novel. The dense dialogue in accents. For a middle grade book, the text is filled with a lot of phonetic spellings and backwards english. I guess it is to be atmospheric, but it just makes the characters seem dumb. And that is sad because they are not. Stubborn, and sometimes too preoccupied to see what is under their noses but not stupid. I sometimes felt that the characters had been written into a corner so there were multiple instances of "because magic" and convenient acts of random fortuitous "we have everything we need and don't have to search more because the Luck Gods were smiling". Once or twice I completely missed how the characters got from point A to point B and I Really dislike "wave a wand and everything is good and the mortals forget what happened". A little convenient magic written to solve a solution is fine. But the ending sort of feels a little flat when a Major concern for the entire novel is resolved by sleight of hand. On the whole though, the characters are likable, and age appropriate (though a bit whiny at times for this parent ;-p) and I liked that diversity isn't a "cause" its just an adjective...As in, there is a gay couple who act like every other parent in the story. There is a deaf younger brother who isn't treated as 'precious' but as a functioning human. Even one of the main characters is intersex and does question "Am I girl enough to be a witch". None of the cast of characters feels forced or out of place making this a nice addition to my kid's library. ARC free in exchange for an honest review.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 30, 2021
L
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Luis
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★★★★★ 5
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Format: Hardcover
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Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2024
A
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Allie
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 5
Toddler boy moms!!
Format: Hardcover
If you are buying for a toddler (especially a boy) they will love this! The book itself is great quality, the images are so fun to look at, and the pop ups keep my toddler so engaged! So fun to read the month of November and spark conversations about what we’re thankful for!
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Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2025
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CW
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
Thankful for a Construction book
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My son loves this book. We read it every night before Thanksgiving. We will continue to read it throughout the year too. It has flaps throughout the book and make it interactive. Great buy.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2025

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