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Description
anthurium neo superbum Anthurium 'Neo-superbum' – Bullate Bird's Nest HybridAnthurium Neo superbum Dark, textured and self heading, Anthurium Neo superbum grows as a birds nest Anthurium with leaves rising from a central crown. The rosette builds densely above the pot, so mature growth stays compact and crown led. The thick green leaves have a lightly sculpted surface that catches light across the blade. As the plant matures, the foliage forms a broad rosette of darker leaves with firm substance and visible texture. What
Anthurium ‘Neo-superbum’
Dark, textured and self-heading, Anthurium ‘Neo-superbum’ grows as a bird’s-nest Anthurium with leaves rising from a central crown. The rosette builds densely above the pot, so mature growth stays compact and crown-led.
The thick green leaves have a lightly sculpted surface that catches light across the blade. As the plant matures, the foliage forms a broad rosette of darker leaves with firm substance and visible texture.
What stands out on Anthurium ‘Neo-superbum’
- Bird’s-nest habit: Leaves emerge from a central crown and build a compact rosette above the pot.
- Dark green leaves: Mature blades carry a deep green tone across the leaf surface.
- Textured surface: Mature leaves can show a lightly bullate, uneven surface with small rises and depressions across the blade.
- Firm leaf substance: The leaves feel thicker than many velvet Anthuriums and hold their shape well once hardened.
- Self-heading growth: It stays centred in the pot as leaves continue to emerge from the crown.
Rosette growth and pot behaviour
Anthurium ‘Neo-superbum’ grows from a crown that should sit clearly above the substrate surface. The base needs airflow, especially after watering, because water held against the crown can soften young tissue. A pot with enough width for the leaf spread suits the rosette better than a deep container that stays wet around the lower roots.
The root zone should stay lightly moist but open. A chunky Anthurium mix with bark, coco chips, perlite or pumice lets water pass through while keeping fine roots from drying too sharply between waterings.
Keeping the rosette healthy
- Light: Give bright filtered light. A position close to an east window or set back from stronger southern or western sun keeps the leaves dark without scorching them.
- Water: Water thoroughly, then let the upper part of the mix lose some moisture before watering again. The crown should never sit in wet, dense substrate.
- Substrate: Use an airy Anthurium mix with coarse structure. Fine, compact soil can hold too much water around the central base.
- Humidity: Moderate to higher humidity helps new leaves open smoothly. Around 55–70% is usually enough when watering and airflow are steady.
- Temperature: Keep it warm, ideally above 18 °C. Cold wet roots can slow growth and damage the crown.
- Pot setup: Keep the plant planted at the same crown height after repotting. Burying the base too deeply increases the risk of rot.
Leaf and root problems to watch for
- Soft crown tissue: Usually points to wet substrate packed around the central growth point.
- Brown leaf tips: Often come from irregular watering, dry air, mineral build-up or repeated drying at the root edge.
- Distorted new leaves: Check fresh growth for thrips or mites, especially when new leaves open unevenly.
- Yellowing lower leaves: One older leaf can fade naturally, but several yellowing leaves at once usually mean the root zone is too wet or too cold.
Plant safety
Anthurium is not pet-safe. The plant contains calcium oxalate crystals, which can irritate the mouth, throat, skin and eyes if chewed or if sap is rubbed onto sensitive skin. Keep it away from pets and small children, and wash your hands after pruning or cleaning damaged leaves.
Genus note for Anthurium ‘Neo-superbum’
Anthurium was published by Schott in 1829, and the genus name comes from Greek words for flower and tail, referring to the spadix. Anthurium ‘Neo-superbum’ grows in cultivation as a self-heading rosette Anthurium with dark thick leaves and a central crown.
The finished rosette sits low and broad, with dark textured leaves held above the pot.
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