Arum hygrophilum

Boiss. 1854

This species is native to the Mediterranean Africa and to the East to Syria.
It belongs to the section Dioscoridea, subsection Hygrophila.



I got one tuber in Summer of 2011, it was 35mm in diameter.
I planted it in the garden, in October it started to grow.
In the garden it was planted shallow in a pot. Afraid of the incoming winter, at the end of November I took the plant home.
In spite of growing in the most sunny place in the southern window, it grew about 60 cm tall.
The first leaves were hastate, the next ones triangularly sagittate.
All Arum plants cultivated at home are very susceptible to spider mites attacks from "nowhere".
None of the plants on the sill was infested, but they appeared on this one.
Cataphylls preceeding the leaf are purple and there are usually purple streaks on the lower part of the petioles.
December, the 10th - an inflorescence in a bud
The outer margin of the spathe is purple.
The spathe opened on the 13th, the whole plant
had an untypical habit with its vertically upheld leaves.
The inflorescence is scentless. The spathe interior in the upper part is always pale green, only with purple margins.
The total height of this spathe was 8.5 cm.
On the second day it opened a little more yet.
The appendix is sessile, thin and purple.
The lower spathe interior is also purple.
The male flowers are dark red, the female flowers yellow-green,
the stigmata whitish with purple margins.
all photos in this page © Marek Argent

The IAS: Arum hygrophilum
Tropicos: Arum hygrophilum
CATE Araceae: Arum hygrophilum
Krzysztof Kozminski: Arum hygrophilum
page created on 2011-12-26
last updated on 2011-12-26