
Pay in installments of $5.13 with
,
and
Shipping Estimate
USA
- USA
- CAN
- USA
- CAN
Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jun 28 - Jul 3
For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15
Description
nerve plant indoor Fittonia albivenisFittonia albivenis Fittonia albivenis is a low, creeping tropical plant with softly textured leaves and a fine network of contrasting veins. It grows from rooting stems that spread outward across the surface of the pot, forming a small mat close to the substrate. The species is best known as nerve plant or mosaic plant because the leaf veins create a sharp pattern across the green blade. Plain Fittonia albivenis is often represented by white or pale
Fittonia albivenis
Fittonia albivenis is a low, creeping tropical plant with softly textured leaves and a fine network of contrasting veins. It grows from rooting stems that spread outward across the surface of the pot, forming a small mat close to the substrate.
The species is best known as nerve plant or mosaic plant because the leaf veins create a sharp pattern across the green blade. Plain Fittonia albivenis is often represented by white- or pale-veined forms, but the species also sits behind many red and pink-veined cultivars grown for terrariums, bowls and small pots.
Quick foliage and growth details
- Low evergreen subshrub in the Acanthaceae family.
- Native to wet tropical South America, where it grows in humid, shaded forest conditions.
- Rooting stems create a spreading mat that stays naturally low.
- Oval leaves show contrasting vein patterns in white, pink or red depending on the selection.
Rooting stems in humid forest conditions
Fittonia albivenis grows close to the forest floor, with thin leaves, shallow surface roots, filtered light, steady moisture and warm air around the forest floor. Indoors, that biology shows in its quick reaction to dryness: the plant can collapse dramatically when the root ball gets too dry, then often lifts again after watering if the stress has been short.
The stems root at nodes when they touch moist substrate, so a healthy plant slowly fills the pot surface. Small white flower spikes can appear above the low mat. Pinching long tips keeps the mat dense and encourages fresh leaf growth from lower nodes.
Moisture, light and trimming for Fittonia albivenis
- Water: Keep the substrate evenly lightly moist. Water before the whole root ball dries, then let excess water drain fully.
- Light: Keep in bright indirect light. Direct sun can scorch the thin leaves, while very dark conditions reduce density and weaken the pattern.
- Substrate: Use a moisture-retentive but airy mix with fine bark, coco fibre, perlite or similar drainage material. The roots need steady moisture and oxygen together.
- Humidity: High humidity helps the leaves stay flat and fresh. Terrariums, vitrines and grouped humid setups suit the plant well when airflow and cleanliness are maintained.
- Temperature: Keep above 17°C and protect from cold draughts. Sudden chills can cause limp leaves and stalled growth.
- Pruning: Pinch or trim long stems to maintain a dense mat. Cuttings root readily in warm, humid conditions.
- Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth. Small Fittonia roots do not need strong fertiliser doses.
Fittonia leaf symptoms and causes
- Sudden wilting: Check substrate moisture immediately. If the root ball is dry, water thoroughly and keep conditions humid while the leaves recover.
- Brown crispy edges: Look for low humidity, missed watering or sun exposure. Stabilise moisture and move the plant out of direct rays.
- Yellow soft leaves: Check for waterlogged substrate or a closed container with poor airflow. Reduce watering and improve the mix if roots smell sour.
- Leggy growth: Increase filtered light and pinch the longest stems so new growth forms closer to the pot surface.
Safety in homes with pets
Fittonia is listed as non-toxic to dogs, cats and horses by ASPCA under its synonym Fittonia verschaffeltii. Plant chewing can still upset the stomach, so loose cuttings and trimmed leaves are best removed after maintenance.
Botanical name background
Fittonia albivenis belongs to Acanthaceae. The genus name honours Elizabeth and Sarah Mary Fitton, authors connected with early botanical education. The species epithet albivenis means “white-veined”, referring to the pale-veined forms through which the species became known.
Fittonia albivenis stays low and close-textured, with fine venation and creeping stems that sit naturally in small pots, humid bowls and glass plantings.
Shipping Notes
- Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
- Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
- Delivery to the USA:
- Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
- If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
- We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
- Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
- To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
- Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy