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This is a continuously updated archive of the Aroid-L mailing list in a forum format - not an actual Forum. If you want to post, you will still need to register for the Aroid-L mailing list and send your postings by e-mail for moderation in the normal way.
RE: [Aroid-l] Philodendron verrucosum
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From: "Weaver, Bill" bill.weaver at hp.com> on 2006.03.30 at 06:56:52(14016)
I got one from Ecuagenera and they said it was a cool
grower. We'll see.
Bill
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[mailto:aroid-l-bounces@gizmoworks.com] On Behalf Of Ron
KaufmannSent: Wednesday, March 29, 2006 11:05To:
Discussion of aroidsSubject: Re: [Aroid-l] Philodendron
verrucosum
According to records in the W3 Tropicos database,
P. verrucosum has a very wide range, including Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama,
Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. Across this range, it has been reported from
elevations of 50-2000 m, a truly impressive climatic breadth!! Assuming
that P. verrucosum from across the entire range aren't a single, freely mixing
gene pool, I'd guess that the cultural requirements of an individual plant will
depend quite a lot on where it (or its parent(s)) originated. Betsy
Feuerstein posted a message describing the diversity of plants that appear to be
P. verrucosum (varying degrees of petiole fuzz, varying leaf size and color,
varying habitat), and I can second her observations, having seen some of these
beauties growing in the wild in Ecuador. For anyone interested in seeing
photos of Ecuadorian P. verrucosum, I have several posted on my web site at
home.sandiego.edu/~kaufmann/aroids.html (click on "Ecuadorian Aroids" and
"Zamora" to see the P. verrucosum pictures).
I have P. verrucosum from Central America and several from
Ecuador in an intermediate greenhouse that stays moderately humid and reaches
temperatures of 85 deg during the day, with night temperatures at this time of
year down into the low 50s. The Ecuadorian plants, which are diverse, seem
to grow better under these conditions than the Central American plants, and I've
been impressed at the speed with which they shoot upward, once they're
established. A really beautiful species, and one that I personally find
well worth growing!
Ron
Big Herm wrote:
At 06:18 AM 3/29/2006, you wrote:
Agreed on the difficulty of growing verrucosum in normal growing
conditions, including a shadehouse. I imagine in a high
humidity, temp-controlled, wet-wall greenhouse, it would thrive. I've
tried verrucosum several times without success.
Russ central
Fla
I grew mine eventually in a terrarium. I found it did OK, which is to say,
it did not thrive, even in a greenhouse unless i grew it in the hyper humid,
steamy hot greenhouse we called MALARIA, and which we used as an intense
propagating house.
hermine
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