HELP! I have to save this philodendron ASAP!!!!

Fairfax, VA

This is a strange situation, but a dire one! When my brother was born, he got a plant at the hospital. Me and all of my siblings did. His was a philodenedron (I think? That's what my mom thinks), and my mom has been keeping it in water in a vase for the past 20 years. She had it in the kitchen sink for cleaning, and left it for one minute to do something else. In this time span, my 4 month old kitten fished it out of the vase, and shredded it up on the kitchen floor! (this cat has been attracted to plants since we found him. always pulling flowers out of vases.) My mom is totally heartbroken and wants to do anything she can to save this plant, as she has kept all of these "baby plants" for all of her children.

A lot of the leaves came off, if not all of them. I laid everything out to see what was what and took a pic. The parts of the plant with the red dots are the only ones I *think* are salvageable. The leaves have their full stems, can anything be done with them? I don't know anything about gardening, and she's freaking out so I thought I could ask here. Thank you for any advice! This is a weird situation! (btw - not sure what forum to post on? sorry for reposts)

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Saugerties, NY(Zone 5a)

I think alot of them can be saved just by putting them back in water, you've got alot of root growth and I dont think you need to worry about loosing the philo.... Bad Bad kitty LOL !!!!

Fairfax, VA

she put everything back in the vase with clean water I hope it will be okay!

little kitty had been locked in my room during this ordeal and I go back in to find that he knocked over my mini "good luck" bamboo plant and was batting it around. he's crazy attracted to plants!! annoying lol but he is cute and lovable.

Saugerties, NY(Zone 5a)

When my cat was a kitten anytime she went near my plants I would get her with a shot of water from my spray bottle, she learned pretty quick LOL !!!!

Bay City, MI(Zone 6a)

If you plan on keeping the plant in water indefinitely, then putting the cuttings in water to root is fine, but if you plan on growing the cuttings in soil, there are good reasons to avoid rooting in water. I wrote the following a while back in response to a thread with some similarities to this. I hope you find it helpful/interesting. You can skip the technical jargon & still get the gist.

Though roots form readily and often seemingly more quickly on many plants propagated in water, the roots produced are quite different from those produced in a soil-like or highly aerated medium (perlite - screened Turface - calcined DE - seed starting mix, e.g.). Physiologically, you will find these roots to be much more brittle than normal roots due to a much higher percentage of aerenchyma (a tissue with a greater percentage of intercellular air spaces than normal parenchyma).

Aerenchyma tissue is filled with airy compartments. It usually forms in already rooted plants as a result of highly selective cell death and dissolution in the root cortex in response to hypoxic conditions in the rhizosphere (root zone). There are 2 types of aerenchymous tissue. One type is formed by cell differentiation and subsequent collapse, and the other type is formed by cell separation without collapse ( as in water-rooted plants). In both cases, the long continuous air spaces allow diffusion of oxygen (and probably ethylene) from shoots to roots that would normally be unavailable to plants with roots growing in hypoxic media. In fresh cuttings placed in water, aerenchymous tiossue forms due to the same hypoxic conditions w/o cell death & dissolution.

Note too, that under hypoxic (airless - low O2 levels) conditions, ethylene is necessary for aerenchyma to form. This parallels the fact that low oxygen concentrations, as found in water rooting, generally stimulate trees (I'm a tree guy) and other plants to produce ethylene. For a long while it was believed that high levels of ethylene stimulate adventitious root formation, but lots of recent research proves the reverse to be true. Under hypoxic conditions, like submergence in water, ethylene actually slows down adventitious root formation and elongation.

If you wish to eventually plant your rooted cuttings in soil, it is probably best not to root them in water because of the frequent difficulty in transplanting them to soil. The brittle "water-formed” roots often break during transplant & those that don't break are very poor at water absorption and often die. The effect is equivalent to beginning the cutting process over again with a cutting in which vitality has likely been reduced.

If you do a side by side comparison of cuttings rooted in water & cuttings rooted in soil, the cuttings in soil will always (for an extremely high percentage of plants) have a leg up in development on those moved from water to a soil medium for the reasons outlined above.


Al

night blooming cereus:

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