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Spathiphyllum is a genus of about 60 species of in the family , native to tropical regions of the and southeastern . Certain species of Spathiphyllum are commonly known as spath or peace lilies.

They are with large leaves long and broad. The are produced in a spadix, surrounded by a long, white, yellowish, or greenish . The plant does not need large amounts of light or water to survive. It is most often grown as a houseplant. However, it can withstand the elements well enough to thrive when planted outdoors in hot and humid situations.


Description
Spathiphyllum is a genus of evergreen plants with dark green foliage that can reach in height. Rosettes of glossy, dark green leaves emerge directly from a low-lying or underground creeping stem. The leaves are elliptical or lanceolate, long and wide. They are supported on shoots (petioles) of shorter or similar length to the leaf.

The rises above the foliage, with a single white or greenish-white (a specialized leaf associated with the flower) partially surrounding the flower structure. The spathe is elliptical or lanceolate, and long. It surrounds the spadix (a short fleshy structure that contains the male and female flower parts), which is greenish-white or cream in color, and shorter than the surrounding spathe. The spadix is covered in equal-sized flowers that contain both the male and female reproductive parts. All Spathiphyllum flowers on a given spadix mature at the same time, and produce for up to four days. Pollinated flowers produce ovoid fruits that mature over four to six months, each containing up to eight seeds.


Ecology and distribution
Members of Spathiphyllum are widespread in Central America and northern South America. Two species are found on Pacific islands: one on ( S. laeve) and one in Indonesia and the Philippines ( S. commutatum). They grow on the forest floors of tropical humid forests, in shady, moist or wet areas along rivers and streams, in and . They often grow in colonies along waterways, and can be in places periodically inundated with water.


Taxonomy
Spathiphyllum includes 59 accepted species. Several sections of the genus have also been recognized. Massowia, which includes the widespread American S. cannifolium and the Pacific S. laeve and S. commutatum; Dysspathiphyllum containing only the Colombian S. humboldtii; and the larger sections Spathiphyllum and Amomophyllum.


Selected species
Species include:

  • Spathiphyllum atrovirens
  • Spathiphyllum bariense
  • Spathiphyllum blandum
  • Spathiphyllum brevirostre
  • Spathiphyllum cannifolium
  • Spathiphyllum cochlearispathum
  • Spathiphyllum commutatum
  • Spathiphyllum cuspidatum
  • Spathiphyllum floribundum
  • Spathiphyllum friedrichsthalii
  • Spathiphyllum fulvovirens
  • Spathiphyllum gardneri
  • Spathiphyllum grandifolium
  • Spathiphyllum jejunum
  • Spathiphyllum juninense
  • Spathiphyllum kalbreyeri
  • Spathiphyllum kochii
  • Spathiphyllum laeve
  • Spathiphyllum lechlerianum
  • Spathiphyllum maguirei
  • Spathiphyllum mawarinumae
  • Spathiphyllum monachinoi
  • Spathiphyllum montanum
  • Spathiphyllum neblinae
  • Spathiphyllum ortgiesii
  • Spathiphyllum patini
  • Spathiphyllum perezii
  • Spathiphyllum phryniifolium
  • Spathiphyllum quindiuense
  • Spathiphyllum silvicola
  • Spathiphyllum solomonense
  • Spathiphyllum wallisii
  • Spathiphyllum wendlandii

Cultivated hybrids include:

  • Spathiphyllum × clevelandii


Cultivation and uses
Spathiphyllum are popular due to their attractive dark foliage and contrasting white flowers, easy care, and variety of available of different sizes. Commercially, Spathiphyllum plants are typically propagated by plant tissue culture, then potted up to multi-well plastic trays, then on into larger containers containing , , , and/or . Plants grow best between . Once at a size ready for sale, plants are sprayed with , which induces flowering 9 to 12 weeks after a single treatment.

It lives best in shade and needs little sunlight to thrive, and is watered approximately once a week. The soil is best left moist but only needs watering if the soil is dry.

(1996). 9780140262438, George Weidenfeld & Nicolson.

The 'Mauna Loa' has won the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

At least one Spathiphyllum is used as food. The young spadix of S. matudae is pickled in vinegar, or cooked with eggs.


Toxicity
Although it is called a "lily", the peace lily is not a true lily from the family . True lilies are highly toxic (poisonous) to cats and dogs, but the peace lily, Spathiphyllum is only mildly toxic to humans and other animals when ingested. Like many Araceae, it contains crystals, which can cause skin irritation, a burning sensation in the mouth, difficulty swallowing, and nausea, but it does not contain the toxins found in true lilies, which can cause acute kidney failure in cats and some other animals.


Diseases
Infection of peace lilies with was first documented in , Japan from 1989 to 1994. Myrothecium roridum has also been used to harden in vitro cultures of the plant. Alternaria alternata leaf rot was documented on peace lilies in Argentina in 2008.Mounika, K., Panja, B., & Saha, J. (2017). Diseases of peace lily spathiphyllum caused by fungi, bacteria and viruses: A review. [1]


History
Heinrich Wilhelm Schott formally described the genus Spathiphyllum – literally "leaf spathe" – in his and Stephan Endlicher's 1832 book Meletemata Botanica. It encompassed two species: S. lanceifolium (previously described as Dracontium lanceaefolium by Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin in 1790) and S. sagittaefolium. Examinations of similar specimens by others resulted in new genera: Frederik Liebmann's Hydnostachyon in 1849 and Karl Koch's Massowia in 1852. Schott redefined Spathiphyllum in 1853, moving S. sagittaefolium into the new genus , and claiming Massowia and Hydnostachyon to be more appropriately Spathiphyllum. Just five years later, Schott's Prodromus Systematis Aroidearum expanded Spathiphyllum to 22 species. From there, the genus remained relatively stable. Collections that included of many Spathiphyllum were destroyed by fire in Vienna (1945, where Schott had worked) and by war in Berlin (where had described several Spathiphyllum species). George S. Bunting revised the genus as his PhD thesis work in 1960, encompassing a total 36 species.


See also
  • , similar looking genus of plants in same family
  • List of plants known as lily


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