Houseplants · Guide

Anthurium bullosum

Anthurium bullosum (Bullate Anthurium) Care Guide

Updated by Funfactorium Editorial1 min readFact-checked
Photo: Remember — approximate match (genus-only) · Public domain
In short

Anthurium bullosum, sold as Bullate Anthurium, is a member of the largest aroid genus and a Neotropical epiphyte or terrestrial rainforest plant. A Colombian species named bullosum for its strongly puckered (bullate) leaf surface, which gives the foliage a quilted three-dimensional texture. Like most Anthurium, it needs bright filtered light, a chunky free-draining aroid mix, and humidity above 60 percent — the leaf surfaces brown and curl in dry indoor air.

Care facts at a glance

Light
Bright indirect
Water
Water when the top 2 to 3 cm of mix has dried, then water thoroughly.
Humidity
60–80 %
Temperature
18–27 °C
Soil
Chunky aroid mix of orchid bark, perlite, and coco coir for excellent aeration.
Toxicity
Mildly toxic if ingested. Sap and leaves contain calcium oxalate crystals that can irritate the mouth and throat. (humans) · Toxic to cats and dogs per ASPCA. Ingestion causes oral irritation, drooling, and vomiting. (pets)
Origin
Neotropical rainforests of Central and South America.
Mature size
30 cm to 1 m tall depending on species; epiphytic species spread along supports.

Overview

Anthurium bullosum is one of about 1,000 species in Anthurium, the largest genus in the aroid family Araceae. A Colombian species named bullosum for its strongly puckered (bullate) leaf surface, which gives the foliage a quilted three-dimensional texture. Most Anthurium are epiphytes or hemi-epiphytes in their native rainforest, which is why they need open chunky mixes rather than dense potting soil.

Care Priorities

  • Bright filtered light, never direct midday sun.
  • Use a chunky aroid mix — orchid bark, perlite, coco coir.
  • Water thoroughly when the top 2 to 3 cm of mix is dry; let excess drain.
  • Humidity above 60 percent — group with other tropicals or use a humidifier.
  • Provide a moss pole for climbing species; terrestrial species are fine in pots.

Common Problems

Yellow lower leaves with mushy stems mean overwatering or compacted mix — repot into chunky aroid mix. Brown crispy edges signal dry air or fluoride-heavy tap water. Webbing under leaves is spider mites; rinse the foliage and treat with insecticidal soap.

Sources & further reading (3)
  1. encyclopedia — accessed 2026-04-28
  2. botanical-garden — accessed 2026-04-28
  3. toxicity-database — accessed 2026-04-28

Frequently asked questions

Why are the leaves so puckered on Anthurium bullosum?

Bullate leaves with raised veins between deep cells are a natural feature of A. bullosum, possibly an adaptation to shed water faster in its rainforest habitat. The puckering is visible from the moment new leaves unfurl.

What soil mix should I use for Anthurium?

A chunky aroid mix works best — roughly equal parts orchid bark, perlite or pumice, and coco coir or peat. Standard potting soil compacts and holds water around the roots, which causes the rot Anthurium are notorious for.

Is Anthurium toxic to pets?

Yes — all Anthurium contain calcium oxalate crystals and are listed as toxic to cats and dogs by the ASPCA. Ingestion causes oral burning, drooling, and vomiting. Keep out of reach of pets that chew leaves.

Related guides