Reference specimenAccession  SKU-00265

Abutilon megapotamicum

Trailing Abutilon

At a glance
Type
Shrub
Hardiness
USDA Zones 8–10
Sun
Full Sun, Part Shade
Soil
Moist, Well-drained
Mature size
Height 24–36 Inches · Spread 36–48 Inches
Growth rate
Fast
Seasonality
Dies back, depends on zone
Abutilon megapotamicum (Trailing Abutilon) hanging lantern flower with a red calyx and yellow petals
Abutilon megapotamicum, Trailing Abutilon at Woodlanders
A plant Woodlanders once offered on our catalogue

This variety is no actively in production in our propagation house and may not return to our catalogue. We maintain this page purely for reference and archival purposes. If you would like to grow this plant, tell us. Your interest helps guide what we bring back.

For a larger installation or commercial project, write hello@woodlanders.net.

Abutilon megapotamicum is the trailing one of the flowering maples, a slender, half-vining deciduous shrub that drapes and clambers rather than standing stiffly upright. Its species name means "of the big river," for the Rio Grande basin of southern Brazil where it grows wild, and like the rest of its tribe it belongs not to the maples its leaves suggest but to the mallow family, in company with hibiscus and hollyhock.

The flowers are its whole charm: curious hanging lanterns, each a swollen red calyx from which a skirt of yellow petals and a dark tuft of stamens protrude, swinging along the branches from late summer well into fall. Hummingbirds and bees find them readily. A Victorian favorite for the conservatory and the hanging basket, it has never quite gone out of fashion among gardeners who like a plant that does something unexpected.

It can be used in several ways: left to spill several feet across a bed in a single season, trained up a support or trellis, or planted in a basket where the lanterns can dangle. Give it full sun to part shade and well-drained soil. In zone 8 it behaves as a dieback shrub, cut down by frost and returning from the base; in warmer zones it holds more of its frame.

Site it where the hanging flowers can be read at eye level or above, against a wall, over the edge of a raised bed, or from a basket on the porch, where its long season of quirky bloom can be enjoyed up close.

Design Notes

A trailing, half-vining shrub for a hanging basket, a raised-bed edge, or training up a trellis. Site where the dangling lanterns can be seen at or above eye level. Spills several feet in a season; cut back hard in spring where it dies back.

Flower, Fruit & Foliage

fuchsia-like flowers, tubular red calyxes with yellow closed petals

Flower. Pendent lanterns on slender stalks: an inflated, ribbed red calyx from which short yellow petals and a column of dark stamens emerge, carried from late summer into fall and visited by hummingbirds and bees.

Fruit. A dry, papery capsule typical of the mallows, splitting into segments to shed its seeds.

Foliage. Slender, arching stems set with small, pointed, lobed leaves of fresh green, sometimes flecked, giving the plant its light, trailing grace.

Care

Light: Full sun to part shade.

Soil: Average, well-drained.

Water: Moderate; water regularly through heat.

Pruning: Cut back in spring to shape or after winter dieback.

Hardiness: USDA zones 8 to 10; root-hardy where it dies back.