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Scientific: Spathiphyllum cochlearispathum
Common: peace lily
Family: Araceae
Origin: Tropical Latin America

Pronounciation: Spath-a-FILL-um co-chlee-air-a-SPATH-um

Hardiness zones
Sunset
13 (with ample protection), 20-24
USDA 9 (with ample protection), 10-11

Note: Used as an indoor container plant in all climatic zones

Landscape Use: Highly constrained to shaded and protected entryways and patios, atriums, shaded planters, indoor containers.

Form & Character: Basally clumping, upright, tropical, clean, pure.

Growth Habit: Tender herbaceous perennial, basally clumping with leaves on extended petioles to 2-feet tall with lesser to equal spread.

Foliage/Texture: Leaves large, dark green, elongated and ovate with distinct veination, petioles extended to 18 inches in length. Foliage often suffers from marginal necrosis due to even moderate soil salinity; medium coarse texture.

Flowers & Fruits: Brilliant white spathe flowers that turn green prior to full senescence; fruits rounded, dark colored when mature.

Seasonal Color: Periodic flowers during most of year except winter.

Temperature: Peace lily has a cardinal temperature range for survival that makes it quite cold and heat intolerant in Phoenix. It will only survive outdoors with the thermal buffering effect and protection of buildings.

Light: Shade, with ample indirect natural light.

Soil: Soil must be highly amended, richly organic and well drained. Fully intolerant of and easily damaged by soil alkalinity and salinity.

Watering: Regular irrigations in desert areas.

Pruning: Remove spent foliage and flower stalks.

Propagation: Mostly by seed, some division of basal clumps.

Disease and Pests: Highly prone to root rot if soils as poorly drained or over watered.

Additional comments: In Phoenix, peace lily is a specialty plant for very specific landscape uses. Soil alkalinity and salinity sensitivites makes peace lily quite difficult to culture in all but the most heavily amended and shaded planter beds. In most of the Unites States, peace lily is used as an indoor container plant.

Special addendum: Popular (non-scientific) reports that peace lily and other tropical plants are able to remove indoor air pollutants grossly exaggerate and misrepresent the original 1989 NASA research study. Rather, peace lily has no ability itself to 'remove' air pollutants (sorry climate change fanatics, but CO2 is not an air pollutant), but actually it was the container substrate that peace lily was grown in that provided a mild 'air-filtering effect' due to its soil microbial activity.