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Growing Spider Plants: Watering, Lighting, Propagation, and Pests
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If it’s already been uprooted, the likelihood of it recovering is not great. If the plant is particularly dear to you, you could try to nurse it back to health, but otherwise, it’s probably better to just start over with a new one.
Thank you!
I've been growing spider plants for years and thought I knew them pretty well, but I have one that's decided to be a non-conformist. The parent plant is quite healthy and has been producing babies regularly. It's variegated, but the babies are sometimes variegated, sometimes not. And it's producing babies on the normal, thin stalks, but also has one stalk that's four to five times thicker and longer, producing mostly plantlet bunches that don't have roots, along with a few normal babies. Lately, a couple of the non-variegated children seem to be doing well, but they grow much slower than normal, with narrower foliage, even living in the same pot alongside their variegated siblings. Was my "mother" plant bitten by a radioactive spider, causing it to mutate along with some of its offspring? Will it become a superhero with its own movie & comic book franchise? Or is it completely normal, and just has some quirks I've never seen before? (Photos of this abomination available on request.)
Variegated plants are often the result of natural mutations that have been selectively bred for and enhanced over generations by doting horticulturalists. Because of this, variegated plants may occasionally produce non-variegated offspring. (You’ll have to consult a botanist or Wikipedia for an explanation on the genetic level, I’m afraid!) Your non-variegated babies’ slow growth and slim leaves could be due to their de-mutation, or even the result of a new mutation. As for the super-thick stalk, it sounds like your mama plant is just very happy with its care and is producing all the babies it can! (Also, the loss of variegation in a variegated plant can also be due to insufficient lighting, but since yours is producing both variegated and non-variegated pups, this is unlikely the cause.)
In conclusion, your spider plants are exhibiting a normal, yet interesting side effect of plant cultivation—no radioactive spiders necessary! (Though we would very much like to see an Amazing Spider-Plant movie now…) Thanks for your question!
Interesting comments. I've studied some biology, but I'm not great with plants yet. There is a genetic concept we do discuss, however, which may apply - "hybrid vigor." This occurs when two genetically diverse progenitors create offspring. The offspring tends to be larger, stronger, and healthier from the genetic combination. I don't know how the spider plants create their own offspring that can look different. Usually, when a mature adult somehow splits off a new organism, the two are genetically identical and it is more of a cloning situation. If the plant somehow goes through a genetic combination and separation (similar to the process of fertilization) or alternatively, if the epigenetic packaging of the genetic structure is somehow redone, then I suppose that you could see phenotype differences. All of those (admittedly) too scientific of phrases would translate to: I wonder if your smaller babies are some kind of genetic reversal in which the special characteristics that were cultivated by the doting horticulturalist are randomly dropped in the offspring. I could guess that it could either be genetic or the way that the genes are packaged and later used.
Interesting!
Thanks very much for your reply. You're correct; the plant is on a southerly-facing window ledge, so insufficient light is definitely not an issue causing the non- vs. variegated plants. Guess I just have to accept that the Mother of All Spider Plants is very happy. You've set my mind at ease, although now I can't get the song out of my head... "Spider Plant, Spider Plant, does whatever a spider can..."
p.s. There isn't a Spider-Plant movie (yet!), but there -is- a 2005 "Spider-Plant Man" 14-minute TV short, available on YouTube and numerous other sites. A spider plant also starred in one of the 1987 "Amazing Stories" episodes, The 21-Inch Sun.
We just brought our curley spider plant in for the winter and it seems to be doing fine but... Should we occasionally mist it? Is sunlight from our west facing patio doors enough? Does it need any fertilizer over the winter?
Hi Lynne,
In winter, most house plants will require less sunlight and less water. There’s no need to mist the plant, and doing so may make it more susceptible to disease. Avoid fertilizing during the winter months, and water the plant less than normal until after the shortest day of the year (and sunlight begins to return).
I recently bought two small baby shoots. Do they have to be put in soil or can I ssrt them in water until they get a little bigger. They are about two inches high. I put them in soil but not doing well. One has gone brown and only has two 'strings' left on it. The other doesn't appear to be doing anything. The soil is still moist. What am I doing wrong if anything?
Hi Loretta,
Now that the babies are in soil, it would be better to leave them. Initially, you can put them in water for a few days or soil—either works just fine. One possibility for the plants not doing well is if they are in direct, hot sunlight. Spider plants like bright indirect light, so if yours are being exposed to too much direct light, that could be the problem. If so, move them to a spot away from the direct light but that still receives bright indirect light. If that’s not an issue, the plants could have been watered too much or are simply shocked from the change in living situation. For both of those, the recommendation would be to let the plants be for a week or so, waiting only to water when the soil is dry up to an inch deep in the soil. Give them consistent, not constant, care. We hope this helps!