Houseplant

Prayer Plant

Maranta leuconeura · Marantaceae

Also called: Herringbone Plant, Rabbit's Foot, Rabbit Tracks

Prayer Plant (Maranta leuconeura) is a moderate-water houseplant well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It's a moderate-growing houseplant.

Prayer Plant (Maranta leuconeura) growing in Tucson
Photo: Kurt Stüber [1] (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Prayer Plant at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Bright indirect light indoors; tolerates medium/low light. Direct Tucson sun fades and scorches the patterned leaves, so avoid unfiltered south/west windows. Leaves fold upward ('pray') at night and open by day.
Mature size
8-12 in tall, spreading 12-18 in wide; low, mounding to trailing habit
Growth rate
Moderate
Bloom
Small white to pale lavender flowers (insignificant; grown for foliage), Spring to summer indoors (rarely blooms indoors)
Cold hardiness
Frost-tender; keep above 55-60°F indoors (ideal 65-75°F). Cannot survive frost, intense sun, or low humidity outdoors in Tucson.
Soil
Rich, well-draining, slightly acidic potting mix high in organic matter (peat/coir with perlite). Resents alkaline conditions, so avoid Tucson native soil entirely.
Native range
Tropical rainforests of Brazil
Best used as
Indoor foliage houseplant, Hanging baskets and shelves, Terrariums, Low-light rooms
Wildlife
None indoors.
Toxicity
Non-toxic / pet-safe. ASPCA lists Maranta as non-toxic to dogs and cats—safe around pets and children.

How to grow Prayer Plant in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Grown only as an indoor houseplant in Tucson. Keep the soil lightly and evenly moist—never soggy and never bone dry—watering when the top half-inch dries, often weekly. Use room-temperature distilled, rainwater, or filtered water; Tucson's hard, salty, alkaline tap water causes brown leaf tips. This plant is sensitive to the dry desert indoor air.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Feed every 2 weeks in spring and summer with a balanced houseplant fertilizer at half strength; reduce to monthly or none in winter. Sensitive to fertilizer salt buildup—flush the pot periodically to prevent leaf-tip burn.

Pruning & care

Trim brown leaf tips and remove dead or faded leaves. Cut leggy stems back to encourage bushier growth; trimmings can be propagated by division.

Notes

Strictly an indoor plant in Tucson—it demands the high humidity and protection from sun and frost that the low desert cannot provide outdoors. Boosting humidity with a pebble tray, grouping plants, or a humidifier helps counter Tucson's very dry indoor air. Brown crispy leaf edges almost always signal hard tap water, low humidity, or fertilizer salts.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; ASPCA Toxic and Non-Toxic Plant List; Missouri Botanical Garden Plant Finder

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