I have some flamingo plants, Anthurium sp., growing in my 60x100x60 cm rainforest terrarium.
My problem is about this big one here
It's about 60cm in height, and I want it to keep it a bit smaller and growing more, but smaller leaves (both the green leaves and the spadices).
The plant is growing on a mixture of orchid and plain clay granules. Lightning is a very natural (and powerful) sun spectrum, and the plant is fully exposed to the lights. The permanent daylight schedule is 13/11 (on/off), which I've chosen mainly for my pets (madagascar daylight geckos) living there. The actual lighting setup is a 50W HID lamp (directly above this plant), and a 150W HQI lamp, that produces most of the required sunlight spectrum.
Also watering is almost completely automated, I've got a rainfall (misting) simulator, that runs 5 times a day (the atmospheric humidity is pretty high ~75-80%).
I have other, smaller flamingo plants growing in this terrarium, and they are more appropriate within my conceptions. Though the plant I'm talking of, already was big from the beginning (~35cm).
My question is:
What can I do (how to cut down) to give this plant a more smaller (ca. 40cm height), and more bushy shape?
To elaborate on my concerns:
I'm afraid of just clipping all of the big leaf and spadix sprouts, could I actually kill the plant?
Any hints appreciated!
lux
orlumen
units (per distance) here, if we want to get precise about what finally reaches out to the plants. I just left over the details, because a 150W HQI is a pretty good indicator for sufficient natural daylight spec, within the dimensions I've given. "I am just learning about lighting for plants..." I've got some experience, just at your service for questions ;-) – πάντα ῥεῖ Sep 16 '14 at 22:54