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Helanthium bolivianum "latifolius"

Helanthium bolivianum "latifolius"

Helanthium bolivianum "latifolius": aquatic plant of the family Alismataceae. Light: Medium to high.

Family
Alismataceae
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

10 °C - 30 °C

pH

5 - 7.5

Water type

Freshwater

Light

Medium to high

CO2

10-40 mg/L

Description

Geographical Origin & Habitat:

Endemic to the tropical and subtropical floodplains, river margins, and marshlands of Central and South America. Helanthium bolivianum "latifolius" (formerly Echinodorus latifolius) is a highly adaptable, robust variant of the standard Pygmy Chain Sword. It naturally colonizes the shallow, sandy, sun-drenched margins of rivers. It is a wildly aggressive, deeply rooted carpet-forming plant perfectly evolved to survive deep submersion by growing distinctly broader, thicker leaves than its cousins.

Taxonomy & Genetics:

Scientifically reclassified into the Helanthium genus, this is a globally recognized, highly prized cultivar/variant of H. bolivianum. Taxonomically, its specific name ("latifolius") literally translates to "broad leaf," which completely defines its physical departure from the standard narrow-leaved chain swords. Genetically, it is completely hard-wired for massive horizontal propagation via aggressive runners, but its DNA actively forces a much wider leaf blade and a slightly taller stature.

Physical Structure:

The architectural structure of "latifolius" is intensely dense, highly structural, and violently spreading. It is a classic foreground/midground carpet plant completely lacking vertical stems. The foundation is a highly aggressive, deeply burrowing, white runner system (stolon) that spreads horizontally. The leaves erupt from stout rosettes along the runners. The foliage is the defining feature: strictly broadly lanceolate to ovate, noticeably thicker, and naturally arches outward (10-15 cm tall).

Color & Texture:

The coloration is distinctly pure, intensely solid, and visually calming. Grown submerged under intense lighting, the dense thicket of broad grassy leaves is a solid, glowing bright apple-green to a translucent grassy-green. Because it completely lacks any genetic mechanism for red anthocyanin pigments, it remains an intensely bright pure green under any light intensity. The texture is distinctly crisp, noticeably stiffer and more leathery than the delicate "angustifolius" variant.

Care and observations

Lighting & CO2:

It is a highly resilient but demanding foreground plant. While it will technically survive in medium-light aquariums, its spectacular carpeting behavior will fail; it will refuse to send out runners, grow sparsely, and stretch tall. To force the violent horizontal spread and the tight, dense, broad-leaf growth necessary to create a thick green lawn, blasting, high-intensity LED lighting is absolutely mandatory. Pressurized CO2 is highly recommended and drastically accelerates the carpet density.

Nutrition & Substrate:

As an incredibly aggressive carpeting plant, "latifolius" is an obligate root feeder. Its runner system strictly demands a fine-grained, heavily nutrient-dense substrate. It absolutely demands premium aquasoil heavily enriched with iron and macro-nutrients. It will fail to spread optimally in coarse gravel, as its delicate runners cannot penetrate it. If starved of root nutrients, the broad grassy leaves will quickly turn yellow, become brittle, and dissolve into mush.

Water Chemistry:

Originating from a vast range across the Americas, it is practically invincible regarding standard water parameters. It thrives effortlessly in heated tropical aquariums (22-28°C) but is equally comfortable in unheated cold-water tanks. It is exceptionally adaptable, comfortably tolerating soft, acidic water as well as harder, moderately alkaline tap water (pH 6.0 - 7.5). The single most critical environmental requirement is absolute substrate stability and continuous nutrient flow.

Space Management & Placement:

Due to its slightly taller, broad-leaved foliage and extreme horizontal spreading nature, Helanthium bolivianum "latifolius" is strictly a dominant midground carpeting plant for large aquariums, or a tall background plant for nano tanks. It MUST be planted initially in tiny, distinct tufts evenly spaced across the bare aquasoil. Because it grows via aggressive subterranean runners, it will rapidly bridge the gaps, forming an impenetrable, thick green lawn that provides unparalleled depth.

Pruning:

Pruning is a simple, massive, and highly necessary procedure to maintain the carpet. Never attempt to uproot the plant once established. To prune, you must use curved aquascaping scissors to literally "mow the lawn." You aggressively cut the arching leaves down to 3-5 cm above the substrate. This brutal haircut forces the plant to abandon vertical growth and immediately invest massive energy into horizontal runners, thickening the carpet. Sever stray runners that attempt to invade other zones.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest threat to a "latifolius" carpet is Hair Algae, Cyanobacteria, and coarse substrate. Because the dense, broad leaves trap detritus, they act as massive landing pads for devastating Hair Algae if water flow is poor or nutrients spike. Once algae aggressively intertwines with the dense grass, it is nearly impossible to separate mechanically. The second risk is planting in coarse gravel; the delicate runners will be crushed, the plant will exhaust its energy, and die.

Plant profile

Placement
Centro vasca, Nano-acquario, Primo piano a gruppo
Botanical form
rosette
Light
Medium to high
CO2
10-40 mg/L
Growth
Rapida
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
Stoloni
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
Centro vasca, Nano-acquario, Primo piano a gruppo

Image gallery

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

Representative live aquarium/natural image from Baldellia ranunculoides (same family Alismataceae) because no reusable exact aquarium photo was found for Helanthium bolivianum "latifolius".