Lithops MIX succulent ice plant cacti flower cactus living stone seed 50 SEEDS
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£10.49 to Worldwide
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Shipping options
Seller handling time is 3 business days Details
This reflects the seller's handling time and may not include time spent in transit.
If you have questions about shipping, please contact the seller.
£10.49 to Worldwide
Ships from
United States
Offer policy
OBO - Seller accepts offers on this item.
Details
You can make your offer during the checkout process as long as you do not live in a state where marketplace facilitator tax laws exist.
Check your state.
Payment options
PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted
Item traits
Category: |
Plants & Seedlings
|
Quantity Available: |
291 in stock
|
Condition: |
Unspecified by seller, may be new.
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Plant Category: |
Cactus & Succulents
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Brand: |
Cactus
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Listing details
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Seller pays shipping for this item.
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Posted for sale:
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More than a week ago
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Item number:
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775906839
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PACKAGE OF 50 SEEDS, Living stones.
Interesting shape and color, lots of species and varieties mixed, the
package have all seeds mixed not individual labeled, the seeds were
took this season, We have a lot of extremely rare cactus if you want
something rare let me know and I will listing for you. Questions? feel
free to email me.
Lithops is a genus of succulent plants native to southern Africa. "Lithos" means "stone" and "-ops"
means "face" in Ancient Greek; therefore "Lithops" means "stone-like".
This is a very good description of these plants, which avoid being eaten
by blending in with surrounding rocks. They are often known as peable plants or living stones. The formation of the name from the greek "-ops" means that even a single plant is called a Lithops.
Individual Lithops plants consist of one or more pairs of
bulbous, almost fused leaves opposite to each other and hardly any stem.
The slit between the leaves contains the meristem and produces flowers and new leaves. The leaves of Lithops
are mostly buried below the surface of the soil, with a partially or
completely translucent top surface or window allowing light to enter the
interior of the leaves for photosynthesis.
During winter a new leaf pair, or occasionally more than one, grows
inside the existing fused leaf pair. In spring the old leaf pair parts
to reveal the new leaves and the old leaves will then dry up. Lithops
leaves may shrink and disappear below ground level during drought.
Lithops in habitat almost never have more than one leaf pair per head,
the environment is just too arid to support this. Yellow or white
flowers emerge from the fissure between the leaves after the new leaf
pair has fully matured, one per leaf pair. This is usually in autumn,
but can be before the summer equinox in L. pseudotruncatella and after the winter equinox in L. optica. The flowers are often sweetly scented.
The most startling adaptation of Lithops is the colouring of
the leaves. The leaves are not green as in almost all higher plants, but
various shades of cream, grey, and brown, patterned with darker
windowed areas, dots, and red lines. The markings on the top surface
disguise the plant in its surroundings.
Lithops are obligate outcrossers and require pollination from a separate plant. Like most mesembs, Lithops fruit is a dry capsule that opens when it becomes wet; some seeds
may be ejected by falling raindrops, and the capsule re-closes when it
dries out. Capsules may also sometimes detach and be distributed intact,
or may disintegrate after several years.
Lithops occur naturally across wide areas of Namibia and South
Africa, as well as small bordering areas in Botswana and possibly
Angola, from sea level to high mountains. Nearly a thousand individual
populations are documented, each covering just a small area of dry
grassland, veld, or bare rocky ground. Different Lithops species are preferentially found in particular environments, usually restricted to a particular type of rock. Lithops have not naturalised outside this region.
Rainfall in Lithops habitats ranges from approximately
700mm/year to near zero. Rainfall patterns range from exclusively summer
rain to exclusively winter rain, with a few species relying almost
entirely on dew formation for moisture. Temperatures are usually hot in
summer and cool to cold in winter, but one species is found right at the
coast with very moderate temperatures year round.
Lithops are popular novelty house plants and many specialist
succulent growers maintain collections. They are relatively easy to grow
if given sufficient sun and a suitable well drained-soil.
Normal treatment in mild temperate climates is to keep them
completely dry during winter, watering only when the old leaves have
dried up and been replaced by a new leaf pair. Watering continues
through autumn when the plants flower and then stopped for winter. The
best results are obtained with additional heat such as a greenhouse. In
hotter climates Lithops will have a summer dormancy when they
should be kept mostly dry, and they may require some water in winter. In
tropical climates, Lithops can be grown primarily in winter with a long summer dormancy. In all conditions, Lithops will be most active and need most water during autumn and each species will flower at approximately the same time.
Lithops thrive best in a coarse, well-drained substrate. Any
soil that retains too much water will cause the plants to burst their
skins as they over-expand. Plants grown in strong light will develop
hard strongly coloured skins which are resistant to damage and rot,
although persistent overwatering will still be fatal. Excessive heat
will kill potted plants as they cannot cool themselves by transpiration
and rely on staying buried in cool soil below the surface.
Propagation of Lithops is by seed or cuttings. Cuttings can
only be used to produce new plants after a plant has naturally divided
to form multiple heads, so most propagation is by seed. Lithops
can readily be pollinated by hand , and seed will be ripe about 9 months
later. Seed is easy to germinate, but the seedlings are small and
vulnerable for the first year or two.