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  • 소인제-Aeonium sedifolium
    식물/들꽃-돌나물과(Crassulaceae) 2021. 11. 15. 20:28

    Aeonium sedifolium is a small succulent plant that, in contrast to most larger flat, has a delicate branches, not to exceed six inches (15 cm) in height and a broad belt with small half inch (1.2 cm) rounded and long, rounded sticky, lime-green leaves, streaked with red streaks radiate up into the rosette. The bright, yellow stellar flowers appear in Spring.

     

    Scientific Name

    Aeonium sedifolium (Webb ex Bolle) Pit. & Proust.

    Common Name

    Dwarf Aeonium

    Synonyms

    Aichryson sedifolium, Greenovia sedifolia

    Scientific Classification

    Family: Crassulaceae

    Subfamily: Sedoideae

    Tribe: Sedeae

    Subtribe: Sedinae

    Genus: Aeonium

     

    How To Grow Aeonium sedifolium (Dwarf Aeonium)

    It does not really like hot or dry weather for aeoniums. They sleep in summer and need no water unless you are very dry. Their leaves curl in extreme heat, to avoid overwhelming water loss. They grow with a humid shade and grow, but their true winter to spring growth season is when temperatures are cool and damp (65–75˚F  / 18–24˚C) . Water when the ground dried up in the winter. Test your finger in an inch or two into the soil. Too many moistures will cause root rot or allow them to sit in wet soil.

    Aeoniums can also cause problems for the types of insects that typically plague succulent plants. Watch out for mealybugs and aphids that are usually covered in rosette folds. You may not know that you have a problem with these bugs until they appear and collect the honeydew they produce. These two pests are more problematic for floral plants. Plants kept in containers are more vulnerable than plants planted in well selected outdoor environments to infestation. Aeoniums may also be preyed on by slugs in the outside, as well as problems caused by aphids, mealybugs and mammals.

     

    Manually remove the slugs and remove them from the battered plant with natural repellents, including diatomaceous earth and/or crushed egg shells. Herbivorous mammals may attract plants in the garden. Rabbits, squirrels, deers and cattle are all delighted to eat them. Birds can eat savory, succulent leaves as well. This is particularly true during drought periods, as water is stored in the leaves. It is impossible to stress sufficiently the need to avoid watering. Every plant that is too watered is plagued and rotten.

     

     

     

     

     

     

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