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Anubias gilletii

Anubias gilletii

Anubias gilletii: aquatic plant of the family Araceae. Light: Low to high.

Family
Araceae
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

12 °C - 30 °C

pH

5 - 8

Water type

Freshwater

Light

Low to high

CO2

5-40 mg/L

Description

Geographical Origin & Habitat:

Anubias gilletii is a highly robust, naturally occurring species endemic to the deeply forested, tropical river basins of West and Central Africa, primarily documented in Nigeria, Cameroon, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. In the wild, it is a formidable rheophyte, specifically adapted to grow firmly attached to massive boulders and thick tree roots along the muddy margins of fast-flowing jungle streams. It thrives in the permanent, heavy shade provided by the overarching jungle canopy, perfectly adapting it to low-light environments in the aquarium.

Taxonomy & Genetics:

First described by the Belgian botanist Émile Auguste De Wildeman in 1904, Anubias gilletii is a genetically distinct, true species within the Anubias genus, not merely a cultivar or variant of the common Anubias barteri complex. It is highly prized by elite collectors and biotopers because its leaf morphology is strikingly different from standard round-leaved Anubias, offering a distinctly wild and prehistoric aesthetic that is difficult to find in commercial trade.

Physical Structure:

The architecture of Anubias gilletii is imposing and deeply structural. It produces a massive, incredibly thick creeping horizontal rhizome. The true defining characteristic of this species is its astonishing leaf shape: the massive leaves are distinctly hastate (spear-shaped or arrowhead-shaped), featuring prominent, swept-back basal lobes that extend sharply outward from where the stem attaches to the leaf blade. The rigid leaf stems grow strictly upright and can easily reach 20-40 cm (8-16 inches) in height.

Color & Texture:

The deeply grooved, arrowhead-shaped leaves are colored a solid, intensely opaque, dark emerald green. The texture is notoriously brutal: the leaves are exceptionally thick, ridged, and highly coriaceous (leathery), feeling almost exactly like thick, rigid cardboard. This extreme, armor-like cellular toughness evolved to withstand torrential seasonal floods and makes the plant virtually indestructible and entirely immune to grazing by heavy herbivorous fish.

Care and observations

Lighting & CO2:

It is strictly an obligate low-light epiphyte and absolutely requires no CO2 injection to survive. Exposing this colossal, incredibly slow-growing plant to intense, high-energy LED lighting or direct sun is a fatal error. The massive, dark leaves cannot photosynthesize quickly enough to utilize the light, guaranteeing they will be instantly and permanently smothered in thick crusts of aggressive Black Beard Algae (BBA) and Green Spot Algae (GSA). It must be kept deeply shaded in the aquarium.

Nutrition & Substrate:

This massive titan feeds exclusively from the water column. The colossal, creeping rhizome MUST NEVER be buried under the substrate (sand, gravel, or soil) under any circumstances, or the entire plant will rapidly melt into a toxic mush and die. It requires absolutely no substrate to survive. Instead, it absorbs all essential nutrients directly through its massive leaves and thick, wire-like root system via comprehensive liquid fertilization dosed directly into the water.

Water Chemistry:

It is an unkillable, prehistoric survivor. It thrives effortlessly in standard tropical temperatures (22-28°C) but easily tolerates cooler water. Most importantly, it completely ignores wild, chaotic fluctuations in pH, severe ammonia spikes, or extreme water hardness. It can survive in soft, highly acidic blackwater biotopes just as easily as it thrives in the hard, liquid rock of an African Cichlid setup. It is the ultimate survivalist plant for unstable water conditions.

Space Management & Placement:

Because of its truly gigantic size, long upright stems, and massive arrowhead leaves, it must be utilized exclusively as a dominant midground or background centerpiece in large aquariums. The massive rhizome must be aggressively attached—using cyanoacrylate superglue, thick zip ties, or heavy nylon thread—to a massive piece of driftwood or a very large rock. It is completely unsuitable for nano tanks, as a single towering leaf will block the entire display.

Pruning:

Pruning is almost non-existent due to its glacial metabolic growth rate. To artificially propagate the plant, use heavy, sharp pruning shears to cut the massive, woody rhizome completely in half, ensuring both halves retain healthy roots. To maintain visual purity, simply cut any ancient, yellowing, or heavily algae-covered leaves directly at the base of the thick stem, as close to the main rhizome as physically possible.

Risks & Diseases:

The plant suffers from virtually no biological diseases, melting, or nutritional deficiencies. Its glacial growth rate and massive, broad leaf surface area make it the absolute perfect, unavoidable host for Green Spot Algae (GSA) and Black Beard Algae (BBA). You MUST keep the aquarium water exceptionally clean, keep organics low, and most importantly, keep the plant heavily shaded by towering hardscape or floating plants.

Plant profile

Placement
Robusta con ciclidi erbivori, Centro vasca
Botanical form
rhizome or creeping stem
Light
Low to high
CO2
5-40 mg/L
Growth
Molto lenta
Expected height
40 cm
Expected width
40 cm
Column fertilization
Fertilizzazione in colonna stabile, regolata su crescita e alghe
Root fertilization
Utile soprattutto per forme radicate; non prioritaria per epifite
Trimming
Rimuovere foglie deteriorate e potare senza destabilizzare il gruppo.
Propagation
Divisione del rizoma, Divisione, Separazione piantine figlie
Nutrients
I range di durezza, CO2 e nutrienti sono conservati nelle note di cura quando riportati dalla fonte.
Sensitivity
Evitare cambi bruschi di luce, CO2 o fertilizzazione.
Layout role
Robusta con ciclidi erbivori, Centro vasca

Image gallery

Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.

Licensed live observation photo for Anubias gilletii. Matched to Anubias gilletii.

Licensed live observation photo for Anubias gilletii. Matched to Anubias gilletii.