enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Calathea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calathea

    Calathea leaves are often large and colorfully patterned. [3] The leaves are often variegated with bright colors such as pink, orange, red, and white. [4] The underside of their leaves are frequently purple. [4] During the night, the leaves fold up. [3] In the morning, the leaves unfurl in search of the morning sun. [3]

  3. Goeppertia roseopicta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goeppertia_roseopicta

    The typical "wild-type", or "natural" form, has papery, ovate leaves of a pastel, seafoam-green hue, outlined with a dark-green edging and "painted" horizontally from the midribs with darker streaks; typical of other species in its family and genus, G. roseopicta features dark reddish, purplish backsides to its foliage, an evolutionary ...

  4. 5 Reasons Your Snake Plant's Leaves Are Drooping ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/5-reasons-snake-plants-leaves...

    The Fix: Protect your snake plant from frosty or freezing temperatures to keep the leaves from drooping. "Placing the snake plant away from doors or cold drafts in the winter will keep your snake ...

  5. Goeppertia insignis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goeppertia_insignis

    The bottom side of the leaves are purple, with the adaxial surface having what look like dark green alternating large and small leaflets overlaid on the light green leaf. [6] Like other prayer plants, its leaves fold together at night, and unfold again in the morning.

  6. Calathea crotalifera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calathea_crotalifera

    Calathea crotalifera, the rattlesnake plant or rattle shaker or Cascabel, is a species of flowering plant in the family Marantaceae. [2] It is native to central and southern Mexico , Central America , and tropical South America as far south as Ecuador , and it has been introduced to Hawai'i and Puerto Rico . [ 1 ]

  7. Goeppertia louisae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goeppertia_louisae

    Goeppertia louisae (syn. Calathea louisae) is a species of plant belonging to the genus Goeppertia, native to Rio de Janeiro state of southeast Brazil but cultivated in other places as an ornamental.

  8. Goeppertia picturata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goeppertia_picturata

    It has the synonym Calathea picturata. Goeppertia picturata is native to northwest Brazil. [2] It has been introduced to Colombia, Peru, the Leeward Islands, and the Windward Islands. [3] Goeppertia picturata is a clump-forming evergreen perennial growing to 35–40 cm (14–16 in). The leaves are dark green above, purple below, marked heavily ...

  9. Marantaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marantaceae

    The plants usually have underground rhizomes or tubers. The leaves are arranged in two rows with the petioles having a sheathing base. The leaf blade is narrow or broad with pinnate veins running parallel to the midrib. The petiole may be winged, and swollen into a pulvinus at the base. [citation needed]