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Curated catalog
Echinodorus sp. "muricatus"
Echinodorus sp. "muricatus"
Echinodorus sp. "muricatus": aquatic plant of the family Alismataceae. Light: Medium to high.
- Family
- Alismataceae
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
15 °C - 30 °C
5 - 8
Freshwater
Medium to high
10-40 mg/L
Description
Geographical Origin & Habitat:
Endemic to the deeply flooded river margins, temporary ponds, and vast marshlands of tropical South America. Echinodorus sp. "muricatus" (often conflated with E. macrophyllus or E. radicans in older literature) is a colossal, true wild-type aquatic swamp plant. It completely dominates its local ecosystem, acting as a wildly fast-growing, virtually indestructible survivor perfectly evolved to exploit both the deeply submerged wet season and the terrestrial dry season by violently breaching the water surface.
Taxonomy & Genetics:
Scientifically classified within the Alismataceae family, the exact taxonomic standing of "muricatus" is heavily debated, often considered a geographical variant or close relative of E. macrophyllus. Genetically, it is completely hard-wired for extreme vertical gigantism, explosive vegetative propagation, and rapid terrestrial adaptation. Its DNA actively forces the plant to abandon submersed growth the moment it senses the surface. It completely lacks the biological mechanism to produce any red or bronze anthocyanin pigments.
Physical Structure:
The architectural structure of E. "muricatus" is overwhelmingly dominant, violently fast-growing, and strictly towering. It is a gigantic rosette plant completely lacking vertical stems. The foundation is a massive, incredibly thick, tuberous subterranean rhizome that deploys an aggressive, deep-reaching root system capable of shattering pots. The leaves emerge directly from the crown on exceptionally thick, rigid petioles. The foliage is monstrous, strictly broadly ovate to completely heart-shaped (cordate), and deeply ribbed.
Color & Texture:
The coloration is distinctly pure, solid, and completely uniform. Grown submerged or emerged, the massive, heart-shaped leaves are an unwavering, solid, glowing bright apple-green. Because it completely lacks red pigments, it remains an intensely bright pure green even under blasting high-intensity light. The texture of the submersed leaves is rigid and slightly wavy. However, once the leaves breach the surface (emerged), they become violently stiff, incredibly leathery, deeply ribbed, and perfectly smooth.
Care and observations
Lighting & CO2:
It is an incredibly demanding, energy-hungry titan. To sustain its terrifyingly rapid, towering vertical growth rate and support its massive, heavy leaves, blasting, high-intensity LED lighting is absolutely mandatory. If severely shaded, the massive green leaves will turn pale yellow, rot, and the plant will melt. Because it is biologically programmed to aggressively breach the surface, pressurized CO2 drastically accelerates its vertical race. Once it breaches the surface, the massive emerged leaves will completely shadow the entire aquarium.
Nutrition & Substrate:
As a colossal, wild-type Amazon Sword, E. "muricatus" is a terrifyingly aggressive, obligate root feeder. Its massive root system strictly demands a very deep (minimum 10 cm / 4 inches), heavily nutrient-dense substrate. It absolutely demands premium aquasoil heavily enriched with iron and macro-nutrient root tabs directly beneath the massive tuber. It will rapidly strip a standard gravel bed of all nutrients within weeks. If starved of root nutrients, the towering green leaves will quickly turn white, rot, and dissolve into mush.
Water Chemistry:
Originating from a vast geographical range across South America, it is practically invincible regarding standard water parameters. It thrives effortlessly in heated tropical aquariums (22-28°C) but is also exceptionally adaptable, tolerating both soft, highly acidic blackwater and rock-hard, highly alkaline tap water (pH 6.0 - 8.5). The single most critical environmental requirement is intense, continuous root nutrient supplementation. It prefers slow to moderate water flow to avoid snapping its massive petioles.
Space Management & Placement:
Due to its absolute monstrous size (capable of reaching 60-100+ cm in height and extreme width) and wildly dominant nature, this plant is strictly reserved as an extreme background centerpiece for massive, open-top aquariums, paludariums, or indoor ponds (minimum 400 liters). It MUST be planted singularly. It is specifically utilized by aquascapers who explicitly want a plant to violently breach the surface. It will produce massive, rigid emerged leaves that will aggressively block out all light to the tank below.
Pruning:
Pruning is a constant, brutal, and necessary procedure if you wish to keep the plant fully submerged, though it will constantly fight you. Because the plant naturally wants to breach the surface, you must aggressively prune off the taller leaves before they reach the air. To prune, you must reach down to the absolute base of the massive rosette and cleanly slice the incredibly thick petiole directly at the crown. If you do not ruthlessly prune the taller leaves, the plant will permanently switch to its massive emerged form.
Risks & Diseases:
The absolute greatest threat to this titan is nutrient starvation and self-shading. Because its growth rate is so violently fast, it will rapidly strip the substrate of all available nutrients. The moment it runs out of food, the massive green leaves will immediately turn translucent and melt into a massive amount of slimy organic waste. The second major risk is self-shading; once the massive, leathery emerged leaves breach the surface, they completely block the light, causing all submerged leaves to rot and die off.
Plant profile
- Placement
- halb-emers (offene Becken), Sfondo
- Botanical form
- rosette
- Light
- Medium to high
- CO2
- 10-40 mg/L
- Growth
- Rapida
- Expected height
- 50 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
- Infiorescenze proliferanti, 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
- halb-emers (offene Becken), Sfondo
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.
Representative live aquarium/natural image from Echinodorus uruguayensis (same genus) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Echinodorus sp. "muricatus".