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Description
philodendron melanochrysm Philodendron melanochrysum – Foliage FactoryPhilodendron melanochrysum Philodendron melanochrysum is an Araceae species from Colombia, known for deep green velvet leaves, pale to golden venation and adult blades that become much more elongated as the plant matures. Young leaves are smaller and more heart shaped; older leaves gain their strongest proportions once the stem has steady upward support. Direct sun can mark the soft leaf surface, dry air can make new growth stick or tear, and cold wet
Philodendron melanochrysum
Philodendron melanochrysum is an Araceae species from Colombia, known for deep green velvet leaves, pale to golden venation and adult blades that become much more elongated as the plant matures. Young leaves are smaller and more heart-shaped; older leaves gain their strongest proportions once the stem has steady upward support.
Direct sun can mark the soft leaf surface, dry air can make new growth stick or tear, and cold wet roots can slow the plant down. Bright filtered light, an airy mix, warm temperatures and higher humidity help new leaves open more evenly.
Philodendron melanochrysum leaf texture and mature shape
- Family: Araceae, the aroid family.
- Foliage: Deep green velvet leaves with pale to golden main veins.
- Juvenile growth: Young leaves are smaller and more heart-shaped.
- Mature growth: Leaves become larger and more elongated as the plant gains height.
- Growth habit: A climbing Philodendron with aerial-root nodes along the stem.
- Indoor development: Leaf size improves gradually on support, while young plants stay much smaller.
- Growth rate: Moderate in warm, bright, humid conditions, slower when kept cool or too dry.
- Safety: Toxic if chewed or swallowed by pets or children.
How Philodendron melanochrysum develops on support
Philodendron melanochrysum grows from an upward stem, and adult leaf size improves when the nodes can attach to a vertical surface. A pole, plank or similar support gives aerial roots contact points and gives each new leaf enough room to expand.
In habitat, Philodendron melanochrysum is associated with humid Colombian forest, where climbing stems develop in filtered light and consistently warm conditions. Indoors, the same growth pattern needs an airy root zone, stable moisture and enough vertical space for the stem to continue upward.
The soft leaf surface should be protected from harsh sun and repeated handling. New leaves emerge delicate and can catch if the air is dry or the plant swings between too dry and too wet. Dry air and irregular watering are most visible while a new leaf is opening.
Care for Philodendron melanochrysum foliage
- Light: Place Philodendron melanochrysum in bright filtered light. Direct sun can scorch or bleach the leaves.
- Water: Water after part of the mix has dried. Cold wet substrate can damage roots and stall new growth.
- Humidity: Higher humidity helps soft new leaves unfurl without sticking or tearing.
- Temperature: Keep warm and away from cold windows, cold floors and draughts.
- Substrate: Use a chunky aroid mix that holds light moisture while leaving air around the roots.
- Repotting: Repot when roots fill the pot, the mix has collapsed or the support no longer suits the stem height.
- Fertilising: Feed lightly during active growth; reduce feeding when light levels and growth slow.
- Propagation: Propagate from stem cuttings with at least one node, kept warm and humid while rooting.
- Leaf care: Avoid rubbing the surface; damaged areas can remain visible on mature leaves.
- Pruning: Remove damaged leaves at the petiole base or shorten an overlong stem above a healthy node.
- Support: Provide a pole, plank or similar vertical surface so the stem can develop upward.
- Semi-hydroponics: Semi-hydro can work when roots are adapted gradually and the reservoir stays clean and oxygenated.
Philodendron melanochrysum leaf issues and pests
- Stuck new leaves: Low humidity or uneven watering can make soft new growth catch before it opens fully.
- Brown leaf marks: Direct sun, dry roots or physical rubbing can damage the leaf surface.
- Yellowing leaves: Check for wet roots, cold substrate or an old mix that has collapsed around the root zone.
- Pests: Spider mites and thrips can hide on textured foliage and tender new growth, so inspect regularly.
Philodendron melanochrysum toxicity
Philodendron melanochrysum contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals, so leaves, petioles and stems should stay away from pets and children that may chew plants.
Botanical background of Philodendron melanochrysum
Philodendron was described by Heinrich Wilhelm Schott in 1829 in Wiener Zeitschrift für Kunst, Litteratur, Theater und Mode, and the genus name means tree-loving from Greek philo- or philein and dendron. Philodendron melanochrysum was described by Linden and André and published in L’Illustration Horticole in 1873. The species epithet melanochrysum combines Greek elements for dark or black and gold, referring to the contrast between the dark leaf surface and warm pale venation.
A velvet-leaved Colombian Philodendron with dark foliage, warm venation and elongated mature leaves on support.
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