Anthurium cabuyalense
Anthurium cabuyalense (Cabuyal Anthurium) Care Guide
Featured photoanthurium-cabuyalense.jpgAnthurium cabuyalense, sold as Cabuyal Anthurium, is a member of the largest aroid genus and a Neotropical epiphyte or terrestrial rainforest plant. An Ecuadorian endemic from the Cabuyal area in the western Andes, with broad heart-shaped velvety green leaves marked by silver venation reminiscent of A. clarinervium. 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.
- 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 cabuyalense is one of about 1,000 species in Anthurium, the largest genus in the aroid family Araceae. An Ecuadorian endemic from the Cabuyal area in the western Andes, with broad heart-shaped velvety green leaves marked by silver venation reminiscent of A. clarinervium. 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 (2)
- encyclopedia — accessed 2026-04-28
- botanical-garden — accessed 2026-04-28
Frequently asked questions
Is Anthurium cabuyalense related to Anthurium clarinervium?
Both belong to section Cardiolonchium of Anthurium and share the velvet-textured silver-veined cordate leaves. A. cabuyalense has more rounded leaves with a slightly bluer green ground than A. clarinervium.
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.
How long do Anthurium spathes last?
Each spathe holds its colour for six to eight weeks under steady warm conditions before fading toward green. Mature plants in good light push new flowers most months of the year.