Celosia Plumosa
Celosia Plumosa Cultivars are dwarf, producing large flowerheads in bright colours including salmon-pink, rose-red, yellow, or creamy white.
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Max Height: 20cm
Origin: Tropical Asia, Africa, North, Central, and South America
Family: Amaranthaceae
Common Name: Cockscomb
Flower Colour: mix
Drought Tolerance: Low
Sun Tolerance: High
Water Requirement: High
PH Level: Basic
Pest Tolerance: Medium
Disease Tolerance: Medium
8.00 د.إ – 37.00 د.إ Inc. vat
Celosia Plumosa Cultivars are dwarf, producing large flowerheads in bright colours including salmon-pink, rose-red, yellow, or creamy white.
Options | Set of 10 Plants, Set of 24 plants, Set of 5 Plants, Single plant |
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Max Height: 10-20cm
Spread: 15cm
Origin: Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay
Family: Portulacaceae
Common Name: Rose Moss, Sun Plant, Purslane
Drought Tolerance: High
Salinity Tolerance: Low
Sun Tolerance: High
Wind Tolerance: High
Water Requirement: Low
PH Level: Basic
Pest Tolerance: High
Disease Tolerance: High
Growth Rate: Fast
Fragrance: No
: 10L (49x21x16cm) 19″ |
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Dianthus | Petunia | Coleus | Polka Dot
Please mention in customer note which seasonal plants you need in Cosmoplast plant pot
Max Height: 10-20cm
Spread: 15cm
Origin: Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay
Family: Portulacaceae
Common Name: Rose Moss, Sun Plant, Purslane
Flower Colour: Mix
Drought Tolerance: High
Salinity Tolerance: Low
Sun Tolerance: High
Wind Tolerance: High
Water Requirement: Low
PH Level: Basic
Pest Tolerance: High
Disease Tolerance: High
Growth Rate: Fast
Fragrance: No
Ipomoea cairica is also known as Cairo morning glory, Cairo morning glory, coast morning glory, coastal morning glory, five-fingered morning glory, five-leaf morning glory, ivy-leaved morning glory, Messina creeper, mile a minute, mile a minute vine, mile-a-minute, mile-a-minute vine, morning glory or railroad creeper.
Ipomoea is one of the most successful climber in UAE, it requires daily watering in summer and alternative day watering in winter.
This species is capable of very rapid growth and can completely smother trees and understorey plants, but it will creep along the ground in the absence of supporting vegetation. Significant infestations may lead to a reduction in biodiversity through the replacement of native vegetation and the displacement of certain native animals. It is particularly common in the coastal districts of eastern Australia, where it often invades river banks and riparian vegetation. It also commonly invades rainforest margins, where it grows over larger trees and smothers tree saplings and understorey shrubs, and is a major problem in littoral rainforest remnants. However, it is also a weed of sandy beachfronts and other coastal environments, drier forests, wetlands, and limestone cliffs.
Coastal morning glory (Ipomoea cairica) is ranked among the top 30 environmental weeds in south-eastern Queensland, and among the 10 worst weeds in Gold Coast City. This species is actively managed by community groups in Queensland and appears on numerous local environmental weed lists in south-eastern Queensland (e.g. in Redland, Noosa and Maroochy Shires). It is also of significant concern in the coastal districts of northern and central New South Wales, where it also appears on several local and regional environmental weed lists (e.g. in Randwick Shire, Strathfield Shire, Lismore City and Sutherland Shire, on the NSW North Coast environmental weed list, and on the Australian Association of Bush Regenerators environmental weed list for the the wider Sydney and Blue Mountains region).
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