Accepted Scientific Name: Senecio radicans (L.f.) Sch.Bip.
Flora xxviii. 499 499 1845
Curio radicans (Senecio radicans) Photo by: Forest Starr & Kim Starr
Hanging basket at Lowes Garden Center Kahului, Maui, Hawaii (USA). January 03, 2008.
Origin and Habitat: Namibia and South Africa (Lesotho, Namaqualand, Estern Cape, Free State, Limpopo, Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, Northern Cape, Western Cape).
Altitude range: 20-1900 metres above sea level.
Habitat: Senecio radicansSN|27772]]SN|27772]] is often encountered at the base of rocks where it inhabits a shallow, wind-blown soil. The dominant vegetation consists of xerophytic dwarf shrubs and succulents, including Sarcostemma viminaleSN|27584]]SN|27584]] and Cynanchum tetrapterumSN|27590]]SN|27590]], as well as Crassulas. These drought-tolerant plants are frequently spaced far apart with wide expanses of sandy or rocky stretches in between. The succulent tissues of Senecio radicansSN|27772]]SN|27772]] help to conserve moisture, rendering it well-adapted for the dry, hot conditions characteristic of its native regions.
Synonyms:
See all synonyms of Senecio radicans
back
Accepted name in llifle Database:Senecio radicans (L.f.) Sch.Bip.Flora xxviii. 499 499 1845Synonymy: 7
back
Common Names include:
ENGLISH: String of Bananas, Fish Hooks Senecio, Fishhooks
AFRIKAANS (Afrikaans): Bobbejaantoontjies, Bokballetjies, Bokbos
ESTONIAN (Eesti): Juurduv ristirohi
JAPANESE (日本語): 弦月、三日月ネックレス
Description: Senecio radicansSN|11713]]SN|27772]], widely known as String of Bananas or Fish Hooks senecio, is a popular hanging plant forming a waterfall of slender, flexible stems lined with curved banana blue-green leaves. It is similar to the more common String of Pearls (Senecio rowleyanusSN|27772]]SN|11713]]), but the leaves are larger, much more elongate (shaped like a banana), glossy with an alternate arrangement and a delicate branching pattern of the strands. The stems are thicker and somewhat more erect. The evenly spaced leaves form a seemingly endless chain of green “banannas” as they creep along the soil. The white and mauve rayless heads of flowers are similar too. It is widespread and very variable but not readily divisible into subspecies.
Habit: It is an evergreen, dwarf, trailing, succulent perennial forming large carpets and will be pendant or scandent with time. If grown in a rockery it will root down along the whole lengths of its stems.
Stems: Prostrate glabrous green more or less glaucous, succulents. Branches slender, wiry, to 1 m long or more, 2 - 3 mm in diameter, usually wing-angled, rooting.
Leaves: Scattered, erect, highly succulent, 7-26(-30) mm long, 4 -9 mm in diameter, from spindle-shaped to almost spherical but always slightly curved upward or banana-shaped with a conspicuous off-centre mucro on the tapered apex, and with a clear window along the adaxial surface plus 20 -50 clear striations, otherwise pale green.
Inflorescence: 10 - 15 cm long, rarely branched.
Flower heads (capitula): 1 to 4 cinnamon-scented, white or off-white, usually in the late winter or early spring seasons, although some growers are able to encourage multiple flowering periods throughout the year. Phyllaries 10 - 12; Ray florets none. Disk flowers 20 - 25, white, fragrant; Anthers yellow or mauve.
Fruits (achenes): Ribbed with a pappus 13 -15 mm long.
Chromosome number: 2n = 20, 40, 60.
Bibliography: Major references and further lectures
1) Urs Eggli “Illustrated Handbook of Succulent Plants: Dicotyledons” Springer, Heidelberg 2002
2) Debra Lee Baldwin “Succulents Simplified: Growing, Designing, and Crafting with 100 Easy-Care Varieties” Timber Press, 21/May/2013
3) Mace, Tony and Suzanne "Cactus and Succulents: A Care Manual” Laurel Glen Publishing 2001
4) Baldwin, Debra Lee, "Succulent Container Gardens”, Timber Press, Inc. 2010
5) ajeva, M. and Costanzo, M. "Succulents, The Illustrated Dictionary", Timber Press, Inc. 2000
6) Bews, John William, "Plant Forms & Their Evolution In South Africa" Longmans, Green and Co. 1925
7)Forest & Kim Starr “Senecio radicans (String of bananas)”. Plants of Hawaii. <http://www.starrenvironmental.com>. Web. 27 Sep. 2014.
Leaves at Sacred Garden of Maliko, Maui, Hawaii (USA). January 24, 2011. (Senecio radicans) Photo by: Forest Starr & Kim Starr Curio radicans (Senecio radicans) Photo by: Giuseppe Distefano Curio radicans (Senecio radicans) Photo by: Giuseppe Distefano Curio radicans (Senecio radicans) Photo by: Giuseppe Distefano Cultivation and Propagation: Senecio radicansSN|27772]]SN|27772]] is grown for the shape, texture, and colour of its attractive foliage rather than for its blooms which are small, white, and not very showy. It is easy to grow, do well in succulent gardens or in a pots in a window sill and forms the striking trailing stems if grown in a suspended basket. A pot atop a pedestal or a hanging basket serves as a perfect home for this trouble-free succulent that tolerates full sun in all but the hottest climates. It is also a great plant for small apartments and is available at many garden centers, specialty stores, and other places where plants are sold, but it is also sold through the internet. S. radicans can provide a much needed textural element to a garden. In a warm Mediterranean climate, it can be grown as a ground cover as well, and if grown in a rockery will root down along the whole lengths of its stems. It is more drought-tolerant than Senecio rowleyanusSN|11713]]SN|11713]], but it needs higher light and is far more prone to etiolation.
Growth rate: The plants grow profusely and can fill a 25 cm pot in just a year or two given the best conditions.
Soil: This plant does well in a cactus potting mix. Use pot with good drainage.
Transplantation: Repotting every 2-3 years. The trick is to be as careful as possible, as the string of pearls falls apart easily. Add some potting mix (compost) to the new container to bring the repotted plant to the correct height. Cautiously upturn the old container, supporting the plant with a gentle hand, position the root ball into the new container, add extra potting mix to fill any empty spaces, and carefully arrange the pearls to hang over the pot.
Watering: Water regularly during the growing season every weeks or so, making sure to drench and letting all the water drain out of the pot. If all the leaves fall off don't fret, stop watering and wait until it starts to grow again. Less water during winter months. In the rest period no high atmospheric humidity!! Care must be taken with watering as they tends to become swollen and untidy in growth habit if given too much water and shade.
Fertilization: Use a liquid plant food that is for cacti and succulents rich in potassium and phosphorous, but poor in nitrogen, because this chemical element doesn’t help the development of succulent plants, making them too soft and full of water.
Exposure: Grow it in slight dappled shade including two to three hours a day of direct sunlight through the year, which encourages flowering and heavy leaf production. Outside in the summer, it grows normally and the leaves attain a lovely blue-violet hue. So, recommended as a houseplant with the caveat that it needs a good deal of light if you want to see the normal leaf shape and any flowers. It do not do well in full shade as it tends to etiolate, and rots easily.
Hardiness: Like most succulents, this species is frost-tender and cannot withstand freezing temperatures, restricting it to areas where the annual temperatures do not drop below this point, but less so if kept on the dry side prior to, and during, cold weather (hardy to -5° C for short periods). However some warmth throughout the year will increase the grower's success (minimum 5° to 8°C during rest season). It does not like hot weather and needs cool air with ample airflow.
Pest & diseases: Just be sure to treat for aphids and mealy bugs if they appear. Rot it is only a minor problem with succulents if the plants are watered and “aired” correctly. If they are not, fungicides won't help all that much.
Warning: Senecio radicansSN|27772]]SN|27772]] is purely ornamental and should never be ingested since all portions of this species are toxic.
Propagation: Stem cuttings are easy to propagate, cut off strings near a node and stick them into fresh soil to restart. The cuttings should root in 2 to 6 weeks. It will form potato-like lumps under the soil.