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Description
mickey mouse plant indoor Xanthosoma sagittifolium 'Mickey Mouse' – Foliage FactoryXanthosoma sagittifolium 'Mickey Mouse' Xanthosoma sagittifolium 'Mickey Mouse' is a variegated tuberous aroid with broad green leaves, irregular cream white markings and an elephant ear shape. Mature leaves can develop distinctive cup like tips or tail like extensions as part of the plants mature leaf form. The plant grows from a tuberous base and produces upright petioles with large soft leaves. Warmth, bright filtered light, humidity and evenly
Xanthosoma sagittifolium 'Mickey Mouse'
Xanthosoma sagittifolium 'Mickey Mouse' is a variegated tuberous aroid with broad green leaves, irregular cream-white markings and an elephant-ear shape. Mature leaves can develop distinctive cup-like tips or tail-like extensions as part of the plant’s mature leaf form.
The plant grows from a tuberous base and produces upright petioles with large soft leaves. Warmth, bright filtered light, humidity and evenly moist but draining substrate help large leaves expand with fewer dry edges or stuck sections.
Variegated elephant-ear foliage
- Leaf shape: Broad sagittate to elephant-ear-like leaves are held on upright petioles.
- Variegation: Irregular cream to white markings appear across green blades, with each leaf showing its own pattern.
- Leaf tips: Mature leaves may form cup-like tips or tail-like extensions as the leaf blade develops.
- Growth base: Tuberous aroid growth stores energy below the leaves and reacts strongly to cold wet conditions.
- Texture: Large soft leaves can mark, tear or scorch when pressed, kept too dry or exposed to sudden direct sun.
Tuberous growth and leaf pattern
Xanthosoma sagittifolium is associated with wet tropical Central and South American regions. In a pot, the variegated 'Mickey Mouse' form grows from its tuberous base and can pause or shed leaves if conditions become too cold, too dark or too wet.
The variegation varies naturally from leaf to leaf. Bright filtered light reduces stretched growth and lowers the risk of scorch on pale tissue, while direct sun can burn cream-white sectors faster than green parts. Strong warmth and careful watering are especially important around the tuber.
Care for Xanthosoma sagittifolium 'Mickey Mouse'
- Light: Give bright filtered light. Direct sun can scorch pale variegated tissue, while very low light weakens growth.
- Watering: Keep the substrate evenly moist during active growth, then let the top layer begin to dry before watering again.
- Humidity: Higher humidity helps the large soft leaves expand with fewer dry edges or stuck sections.
- Temperature: Keep warm and protect the tuber from cold wet substrate. Growth can slow sharply in cool conditions.
- Substrate: Use a rich but airy aroid mix with drainage, such as bark, fibre, perlite and mineral particles.
- Repotting: Repot carefully when roots and the tuber need more space. Do not bury the crown too deeply.
- Fertilising: Feed lightly during active leaf growth. Reduce feeding when the plant slows or pauses.
- Propagation: Propagation is usually by division of tuberous growth where separate viable sections are present.
- Semi-hydroponics: Cold or wet conditions around the tuber can cause rot, so mineral substrate trials need warmth, airflow and careful water levels.
- Pruning: Remove damaged or yellowing leaves at the petiole base. Avoid cutting into the tuber unless division is planned.
- Placement: Keep the large leaves away from hard contact, cold glass and narrow gaps where the blades can tear.
- Growth rate: Growth is moderate to strong in warm, humid, bright filtered conditions and slower during cooler periods.
Variegated Xanthosoma issues
- Leaf scorch: Pale sectors can brown quickly in direct sun or under sudden high-light changes.
- Rot: Cold wet substrate can damage roots and the tuber, leading to soft stems or sudden leaf collapse.
- Leaf spots: Wet leaves and poor airflow can encourage spotting on the broad blades.
- Virus-like markings: Distorted, streaked or collapsing growth should be isolated and monitored because aroids can show viral symptoms.
- Pests: Spider mites, thrips and mealybugs can hide on petioles, undersides and new growth.
Safety for Xanthosoma sagittifolium 'Mickey Mouse'
Xanthosoma sagittifolium 'Mickey Mouse' contains irritating calcium oxalate crystals. The ornamental leaves, petioles and tuberous parts should not be eaten, and the plant should be kept away from pets and children.
Arrow-shaped Xanthosoma background
The genus name Xanthosoma comes from Greek roots meaning yellow body, a reference linked to inner tissue colour in the genus. The epithet sagittifolium means arrow-leaved, matching the broad arrow-shaped foliage seen in many Xanthosoma plants.
Mature leaves bring together green-and-cream variegation, broad arrow-shaped blades and the occasional cup-like tip or tail.
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