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Description
potted coffee plant Coffea arabicaCoffea arabica Coffea arabica is an evergreen coffee plant grown as a glossy foliage shrub, with opposite dark green leaves, a naturally upright habit and neat side branching. Young plants form a compact leafy column, while older potted specimens can develop a small shrub like outline with horizontal side branches. Under bright, warm conditions, mature plants may produce fragrant white flowers followed by coffee cherries. The species is native to
Coffea arabica
Coffea arabica is an evergreen coffee plant grown as a glossy foliage shrub, with opposite dark green leaves, a naturally upright habit and neat side branching. Young plants form a compact leafy column, while older potted specimens can develop a small shrub-like outline with horizontal side branches. Under bright, warm conditions, mature plants may produce fragrant white flowers followed by coffee cherries.
The species is native to north-east tropical Africa, including south-west Ethiopia and neighbouring regions, and has been cultivated for centuries for its seeds. In the wild and in cultivation it grows as a shrub or small tree, often in bright filtered conditions with steady moisture and rich, well-drained soil. Indoors, Coffea arabica develops glossy leaves and tidy branching; flowering and fruiting depend on age, light and mature shoot development.
Coffea arabica main features
- Evergreen tropical shrub with glossy, elliptical, dark green leaves
- Opposite leaf pairs and a tidy upright-to-branching habit
- Fragrant white flowers possible on mature, well-grown plants
- Red coffee cherries may form after flowering under suitable conditions
- Best grown with bright filtered light, warmth and evenly moist substrate
Coffea arabica growth and origin
Coffea arabica belongs to the Rubiaceae, a family that includes many tropical shrubs with opposite leaves and interpetiolar stipules. Its leaves are glossy, slightly wavy along the margins and held in pairs along the stems. In a pot, pruning encourages side shoots and helps the plant develop into a fuller shrub.
As a crop plant, Coffea arabica is often pruned to a harvestable height, but its natural habit is that of a shrub or small tree. The flowers are white, star-shaped and fragrant, appearing from the leaf axils on mature plants. The fruit ripens from green through yellowish or red tones, with the seeds inside becoming the coffee beans after processing and roasting.
Coffea arabica care indoors
- Light: Give bright filtered light or a bright window with gentle morning or evening sun. Strong midday sun behind glass can mark the leaves.
- Watering: Keep the substrate evenly moist during active growth, allowing the surface to begin drying before watering again. Coffea arabica needs steady moisture with air around the roots.
- Substrate: Use a rich but free-draining mix with fine bark, compost and mineral aeration. A slightly acidic to neutral mix suits its growth well.
- Temperature: Keep warm and stable, ideally 18–26 °C. Leaf drop can follow cold nights, draughts or sudden temperature shifts.
- Humidity: Moderate to high humidity reduces dry edges on expanding leaves. Pair humidity with airflow to reduce pest pressure.
- Feeding: Feed lightly and regularly during spring and summer with a balanced fertiliser. Reduce feeding during darker months.
- Pruning: Pinch or trim leggy tips to build a fuller shrub. Older plants can be shaped after active growth resumes.
- Repotting: Repot when roots fill the pot and watering becomes hard to regulate. Refresh the mix before it compacts around the root system.
- Outdoor summer placement: A sheltered, bright shaded outdoor position can suit established plants in warm weather; acclimate gradually and bring indoors before cool nights.
Coffea arabica troubleshooting
- Brown leaf edges: Check for dry root episodes, low humidity, salt build-up or direct sun through glass.
- Yellow leaves: Review drainage, watering frequency and winter light. A saturated root zone in low light quickly stresses the plant.
- Leaf drop: Look for cold draughts, sudden relocation, dry root balls or pest activity.
- Absent flowering: Mature plants need bright filtered light, warmth and steady growth before flowers form; young plants usually stay in foliage growth.
- Scale, mealybugs, thrips or mites: Inspect the leaf undersides, stem nodes and new growth, then clean and treat early.
Coffea arabica toxicity and safety
Coffea arabica produces caffeine-containing seeds inside its fruit, and caffeine is unsafe for dogs and cats. Keep the plant away from pets and children that may chew leaves, stems or berries, especially if fruits develop on a mature plant.
Coffea arabica etymology and botanical background
Coffea is commonly linked to Arabic kahwah, meaning beverage. The epithet arabica means of Arabia, reflecting the historic route through which the plant became known to European botany. Coffea arabica L. was published by Linnaeus in Species Plantarum in 1753 and is an accepted species in the Rubiaceae.
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