Laportea aestuans
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Laportea aestuans

West Indian-nettle · Stinging Nettle · West Indian woodnettle · Scratchbush · West Indian wood nettle

Tier 2 Difficulty: medium Water: low Light: partial_sun
Temperature
20–37 °C
Soil pH
6–7
Hardiness
Zone 10–12
Click count
427
Observations
629

Description

Source: leafsnap

Laportea aestuans (Urtica aestuans), the West Indian woodnettle, is an annual herb of the Urticaceae or nettle family. It is possibly native to tropical Africa, although it now is widespread as an introduced species throughout both the western hemisphere and eastern hemisphere tropics and subtropics, including the USA (California, Florida, Puerto Rico), Central America, the West Indies, India, Sumatra and Java. L. aestuans is a food plant for an edible snail, Archachatina ventricosa, native to parts of coastal West Africa. It is a weedy species in Taiwan. It is a possible host reservoir in Nigeria for African cassava mosaic virus, an important plant pest of a major African food crop, Manihot esculenta or cassava.

Care Guide

💧 Water
☀️ Light Partial sun

West indian wood nettle is native to habitats with dappled light, such as forest understories or rocky sites that offer natural shade. It flourishes in partial sun but can also tolerate full sun.

Ideal: Partial sun
🌡️ Temperature 20–37.8°C

West indian wood nettle comes from tropical areas, where the climate is typically warm and humid. Therefore it is adapted to high heat and moisture. It does not tolerate abrupt temperature shifts and prefers a consistent thermal environment, so avoiding indoor temperature variations is important. It usually cannot withstand cold and needs relatively high temperatures to grow. If the surrounding temperature becomes too low, the plant may stop growing or even perish.

Ideal temperature: 20–37.8°C
💨 Humidity
Humidity:
🪴 Soil 6-7
Soil pH: 6-7
🌱 Fertilizer

West indian wood nettle does well with regular, weak applications of fertilizer to support healthy leaf growth. You should apply fertilizer to West indian wood nettle roughly once a month during the summer. Nitrogen is important for the foliage, and providing nitrogen-rich sources helps West indian wood nettle thrive.

🪴 Pot & Repot
✂️ Pruning
🌿 Propagating
🐛 Diseases & pets
☠️ Toxicity

Characteristics

Plant Type
Herb
Life Cycle
Annual, Perennial
Genus
Laportea
Family
Urticaceae
Hardiness Zone
10-12
Mature Height
0.49 m to 2.13 m
Mature Spread
30 cm to 61 cm
Leaf Color
Green, Dark Green
Leaf Type
Deciduous
Flower Size
0.20 cm to 0.25 cm
Bloom Time
Summer, Early fall, Mid fall
Planting Time
Spring, Summer, Autumn
Harvest Time
Late summer, Fall, Early winter
Native Area
Burkina Faso, Belize, Angola, Guatemala, Madagascar, Rwanda, Eritrea, Nigeria, Yemen, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Jamaica, Uganda, Benin, Mali, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Cuba, Sierra Leone, Equatorial Guinea, Cameroon, Liberia, Mozambique, Venezuela, Burundi, Brazil, Ghana, Ethiopia, Congo, Central African Republic, Malawi, Honduras, Peru, Zambia, Sudan, Guinea, Gambia, Panama, Chad, Colombia, Bahamas, Bolivia, Togo, El Salvador, Senegal, Nicaragua, Guyana, Ecuador, Côte d'Ivoire, Costa Rica, Congo (DRC), Gabon

Tags (5)

Common Names (6)

en West Indian-nettle
en Stinging Nettle
en West Indian woodnettle
en Scratchbush
en West Indian wood nettle
en West Indies Wood-nettle