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Description
anthurium chamberlainii care Anthurium chamberlainii – Large, Dark Juvenile FoliageAnthurium chamberlainii Anthurium chamberlainii is a Venezuelan Anthurium with broad, heavy leaves that develop a strong sagittate outline as they mature. The blades are dark green and semi glossy above, paler underneath, and shaped by deep basal lobes with pronounced veins radiating from the petiole. It needs a steady, airy setup with enough room for the leaves to widen. The large petioles and expanding blades need space around the crown, while the
Anthurium chamberlainii
Anthurium chamberlainii is a Venezuelan Anthurium with broad, heavy leaves that develop a strong sagittate outline as they mature. The blades are dark green and semi-glossy above, paler underneath, and shaped by deep basal lobes with pronounced veins radiating from the petiole.
It needs a steady, airy setup with enough room for the leaves to widen. The large petioles and expanding blades need space around the crown, while the roots need a chunky mix that holds light moisture and drains fast enough for air to return after watering.
Leaf structure of Anthurium chamberlainii
- Leaf shape: Mature leaves are ovate-triangular to sagittate, with a broad upper blade and deep basal lobes.
- Surface: The upper side is dark green and semi-glossy, while the underside is paler and shows the venation clearly.
- Venation: Strong basal veins give the leaf base a ribbed appearance.
- Margins: The edges can look gently undulate, especially on larger blades.
- Geniculum: The joint near the blade may show a reddish tint at the petiole connection.
- Scale: Botanical descriptions record very large blades; indoor size depends on root health, warmth, humidity and space.
Venezuelan montane growth
Anthurium chamberlainii is native to Venezuela, where it is documented from Mérida at roughly 1500–1800 m. That high-elevation wet-forest background points to stable warmth, filtered light, moist air and an open root zone in indoor cultivation.
In a pot, the short-internoded base keeps the plant centred while the petioles carry wide leaves outward. A steady pot with drainage is important once the plant begins to size up, because top-heavy leaves can pull a light container off balance.
Growing Anthurium chamberlainii indoors
- Placement: Leave space around the crown and leaf edges so new blades are not pressed against shelves, walls or neighbouring plants.
- Light: Bright filtered light keeps the large blades developing evenly. Direct sun can mark the semi-glossy surface.
- Water: Water when the upper layer begins to dry, then let excess water drain fully. Roots should stay lightly moist, not sealed in wet substrate.
- Substrate: Use a chunky Anthurium mix with bark, coco chips, perlite or mineral pieces so air remains around the roots after watering.
- Humidity: Higher humidity helps new leaves expand smoothly before they harden. Dry air can leave soft new blades creased or torn.
- Temperature: Keep it warm and stable indoors. Cold wet substrate can damage roots and slow new leaf movement.
Leaf and root stress on Anthurium chamberlainii
- New leaves stick or tear: Usually linked to dry air, uneven watering or crowding while the blade is still soft.
- Brown leaf edges: Check humidity, watering gaps and root condition. Large leaves show moisture stress quickly along the margins.
- Yellowing lower leaves: Occasional ageing is normal, but several yellow leaves at once can point to wet, compacted mix.
- Scorched patches: Move the plant away from direct sun, especially during midday or near hot glass.
- Loose, unstable growth: A heavy-leaved plant may need a deeper, steadier pot as the petioles lengthen.
Irritation risk for Anthurium chamberlainii
Keep Anthurium chamberlainii away from pets and children who may chew leaves or stems. Anthurium tissues can irritate the mouth, skin and eyes because they contain calcium oxalate crystals.
Publication details for Anthurium chamberlainii
Anthurium chamberlainii was described by Maxwell T. Masters and published in Gardener’s Chronicle, series 3, volume 3, page 462, in 1888. The genus name Anthurium combines Greek roots for “flower” and “tail”, referring to the spadix that carries the small flowers. The species belongs to Araceae, the arum family.
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