SKU: 90263273870
alocasia macrorrhiza indoor plant

alocasia macrorrhiza indoor plant Alocasia macrorrhizos

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Description

alocasia macrorrhiza indoor plant Alocasia macrorrhizosAlocasia macrorrhizos Alocasia macrorrhizos is a large tropical Alocasia with broad glossy green leaves, strong upright petioles and a thickened base that gains real weight as it matures. It forms broad green blades, a sturdy base and floor plant scale indoors when warmth, light and root space are strong enough. The species is native from Central Malesia to Queenslands Murray Group and grows primarily in wet tropical conditions. It can form an erect

Alocasia macrorrhizos

Alocasia macrorrhizos is a large tropical Alocasia with broad glossy green leaves, strong upright petioles and a thickened base that gains real weight as it matures. It forms broad green blades, a sturdy base and floor-plant scale indoors when warmth, light and root space are strong enough.

The species is native from Central Malesia to Queensland’s Murray Group and grows primarily in wet tropical conditions. It can form an erect stem to around 1.5 m, with leaves clustered near the stem tips on petioles that can reach around 1.3 m. Species descriptions record light green, ovate-sagittate blades up to around 120 × 50 cm in favourable tropical growth. Indoor plants usually stay smaller, but even young specimens show the same structural direction: large leaves, strong petioles and large roots that need room, warmth and air.

Giant taro leaf structure

The leaves are broad, glossy and arrow- to shield-shaped, with a firm surface and prominent veins. Mature blades are carried on thick petioles and can angle outward from the base, creating a wide canopy as the plant gains height. The base thickens with age, and larger plants can develop a visible trunk-like stem with leaves clustered toward the top.

Alocasia macrorrhizos grows with more physical mass than compact Alocasias. The plant needs a stable pot, enough clearance around the leaves and a position where new blades can open clear of walls, glass and shelving. Large leaves collect dust quickly, so regular gentle cleaning helps the surface stay clear and makes pest checks easier.

  • Leaf shape: broad ovate-sagittate blades with a strong green surface and prominent veins.
  • Leaf size: species descriptions record blades up to around 120 × 50 cm in suitable tropical conditions.
  • Growth habit: upright, stem-forming and heavy above the pot as it matures.
  • Petioles: thick, green and capable of holding large blades on established plants.
  • Indoor scale: a large floor-plant Alocasia with bold tropical structure.

Wet-tropical range and indoor behaviour

Alocasia macrorrhizos comes from warm, humid tropical regions and has also been moved widely through cultivation. Giant taro develops a strong root system, thick base and large foliage. Indoors, warm roots, bright filtered light and a substrate that holds moisture while allowing air back into the pot keep the plant moving.

This plant uses water quickly in warm active growth, especially as leaves gain size. At the same time, large indoor pots can stay wet deep down for longer than the surface suggests. Pot weight, root warmth and the firmness of the petioles give better guidance than a fixed watering day. A heavy, stable pot with drainage is important as the plant gains height.

Root space for macrorrhizos

  • Light: Give filtered daylight or soft filtered morning sun. Strong diffused light helps leaves size up and keeps petioles upright, while harsh midday sun can mark glossy tissue.
  • Watering: Check below the surface before watering; let a cool, heavy pot dry further before watering.
  • Substrate: Use a coarse, moisture-retentive mix with bark, coco husk and mineral drainage for large active roots. Large roots need moisture and air together.
  • Temperature: A cold pot is riskier after watering, so keep the plant away from chilly surfaces.
  • Humidity: Keep air moisture moderately high so broad new leaves can open smoothly. Higher humidity helps large leaves expand cleanly and reduces dry edge stress.
  • Feeding: Use diluted balanced fertiliser while the plant is actively making large leaves. Larger leaves need steady nutrition when light and root warmth are strong.
  • Pot choice: Use a stable pot with drainage holes and enough weight to balance the base. Repot gradually as roots occupy the container.
  • Mineral substrates: Alocasia macrorrhizos can adapt to inert mineral or semi-hydro substrates after careful transition, with warmth and balanced nutrients.

Size, repotting and growth cycle

As Alocasia macrorrhizos grows, new leaves need clearance while they open, and older leaves may spread wider than the pot itself. Rotate the plant gradually if growth leans toward the light, and keep the pot stable enough for the height of the base. A larger plant usually needs floor placement or a wide plant stand.

Repot when new leaves are forming when roots have filled the container or the substrate has lost its open structure. A modest size increase is usually better than a dramatic jump in pot volume, because the lower mix should still dry at a sensible pace. Through the low-light season, growth may slow and watering intervals usually stretch. Keep the root zone warm and reduce feeding while new leaf production is quiet.

Large-leaf root response

  • Yellow lower leaves: One older leaf can fade as the base changes. Several yellow leaves together call for a check of roots, pot weight and temperature.
  • Soft petioles: Review pot temperature, drainage and root condition. Large petioles need active roots to stay firm.
  • Crisp margins: Check humidity, watering consistency, heat load and mineral build-up. Large leaf margins show stress early.
  • Small new leaves: Low light, cold roots, root restriction or recent repotting can reduce leaf size for one cycle.
  • Leaning base: Rotate the pot gradually, improve light direction and use a heavier container if the plant has become top-heavy.
  • Pest inspection: Spider mites, thrips, mealybugs and scale can hide along veins, petiole bases and leaf backs. Large leaves should be checked from both sides.

Vegetative growth and leaf replacement

Remove fully yellowed leaves close to the base once they have faded. Keep healthy green leaves in place because each large blade feeds the roots and next leaf. Clean mature leaves gently with a damp cloth, supporting the blade if the petiole is long or heavy.

Propagation is usually by division, offsets, basal shoots or firm stem/rhizome sections in the growing season. Each section needs firm tissue, active roots and warmth to restart well. Mature plants can flower with a green spathe and pale spadix, and thermogenic flowering has been documented in giant taro. Indoors, the broad tropical foliage and upright size remain central.

Handling a large oxalate-rich aroid

Alocasia macrorrhizos contains irritating oxalate crystals. Place the large leaves safely away from pets and young children. Use gloves when cutting large leaves or dividing the base if sap irritates your skin.

Large-root meaning in macrorrhizos

The accepted name is Alocasia macrorrhizos (L.) G.Don, published under Alocasia in 1839, with Arum macrorrhizon L. as the basionym. The epithet macrorrhizos comes from Greek roots meaning large or long root, referring to the plant’s substantial root and rhizome structure. “Giant taro” is a common English name connected with its large size and cultivated history.

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Me llego intacto muy buen libro y material.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2026
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Halil Aksu
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★★★★★ 5
Must Read - True Strategy for the Age of AI
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I'm a management consultant and an entrepreneur reading these kinds of books for more than 30 years. It took me only 5 days to read this book. But it took me another 5 days to summarize all my notes and thoughts and share with my team. And I think it will take me more than 5 years to implement and build everything inspired and suggested by this book. Sangeet explains in a very fluent, structured and captivating way, with real world examples, how business models change, how AI plays a critical role. We does eliminate all the hype about AI fiction but he focused on AI facts. Strategy is not about how to invest in AI, it's about "where to play" and "how to win." Read this great book, get inspired, and change everything you think you knew about AI and business strategy.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2025
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P. Steinlauf
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Reshuffle Just Reshuffled My Perspective
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Reshuffle completely reshaped how I think about Gen AI and disruption. Sangeet Paul Choudary does a brilliant job of weaving real-life examples with practical frameworks, making big shifts in tech feel both understandable and actionable. What I loved most is how he pushes the conversation beyond the usual “AI won’t take your job, but someone who knows AI will.” Instead, he asks the tougher question: what if the job itself no longer exists because of AI? It’s bold, thought-provoking, and incredibly relevant for anyone navigating change right now. This book feels less like theory and more like a roadmap — one that left me reflecting on my own work and excited about the opportunities ahead. Highly recommend, especially if you’re looking for fresh ways to think about leadership in the age of AI.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2025
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Edward J. Knight
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★★★★★ 4
Overall sound thesis worthy of thoughtful consideration
Format: Kindle
Choudary’s book has the tag line, “Who wins when AI restacks the knowledge economy.” While the book is annoying in sections, vague in others, and prone to jargon in yet more locations, the basic thesis is sound and compelling. It’s worth considering. Choudary’s main argument is that the winners after AI technology is widely adopted will be those who take a systems view of their business rather than simply upgrading individual elements within it. He backs this with several examples based on past technological disruptions and hypothetical case studies. He argues that the best advantages from AI will come from improved communication and managing risk. He supports these arguments reasonably well within the chapters. He also includes 10 Takeaways at the end of each chapter, which is extremely helpful for recapping and making sure the reader understood the thesis. What gets annoying is Choudary goes back to the same case studies again and again and again. I reached the point of saying, “the horse is dead. Please stop flogging it.” Next, some of his arguments about things like “managing risk” are vague—there’s not enough about specific risks to be useful, which leaves AI as a magic wand to wave. Finally, as with many business writers, Choudary occasionally (but not overwhelmingly) drops into jargon like “technological solutionism.” Overall, I recommend the book. It’s made me think, even as I struggle to apply the principles to my own business.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 22, 2025

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