ESGBPTARDEFRRUCN
Taxonomia.Suculentas.com Clasificación Botánica de las Plantas Suculentas..

Taxonomia.Suculentas.com

No se puede entender a las suculentas sin su clasificación botánica.

Aeonium
Webb & Berthel. 1840

Etymology: Derived from the Greek "aionion," meaning ever-living.
Place of Origin: Most of them are from the Canary Islands. A few live in Madeira, and in northern and eastern Africa.

Succulent plants with rosette shapes on cylindrical stems. Evergreen fleshy leaves. Despite being endemic to the Canary Islands, due to its ease of cultivation, it is widely used as a domestic ornamental plant.
Cultivation:

Extremely easy to grow, fast-growing. Requires good lighting, although some species cannot tolerate direct sun in summer. Watering should be spaced out in summer and reduced in winter. Easy propagation through cuttings; it can also be propagated by seeds, but this is less common in cultivation since the seeds are extremely small and tend to disperse. It is common for spontaneous specimens to appear from seeds dispersed by the air.

Diseases and cultivation difficulties:

The main difficulties in cultivation arise from overwatering, which often causes root rot, sunburn on the stems that can lead to the death of a segment, and overheating of the roots when grown in pots, resulting in their death or stunting. All these problems are usually addressed by cutting the stem at a healthy section and replanting it. Otherwise, it is rarely attacked by aphids or scale insects, which are treated with specific insecticides.

Main Taxa
Other Taxa:
Aeonium arboreum (Webb & Berthel. 1840)
Aeonium balsamiferum (Webb & Berthel)
Aeonium canariense (Webb & Berth)
Aeonium castello-paivae (Bolle)
Aeonium cuneatum (Webb & Berthel)
Aeonium glandulosum (Webb & Berth)
Aeonium glutinosum (A. Berger)
Aeonium gomerense (Praeger)
Aeonium goochiae (Webb & Berthel)
Aeonium haworthii (Webb & Berthel)
Aeonium lancerottense (Praeger)
Aeonium lindleyi (Webb & Berth)
Aeonium mascaense (D. Bramwell)
Aeonium nobile (Praeger)
Aeonium palmense (Webb & Berthel)
Aeonium sedifolium (Pit & Proust)
Aeonium simsii (Stearn)
Aeonium smithii (Webb & Berth)
Aeonium spathulatum (Praeger)
Aeonium subplanum (Praeger)
Aeonium urbicum (Webb & Berth)
Aeonium virgineum (Webb & Berthel)
Aeonium viscatum (Bolle)