Common Name: cathedral bells
Family: Crassulaceae
Common Synonyms: none
USDA Hardiness Zone: 10a-11
Growth Habit: Perennial Herb
Origin: Madagascar and Asia
FISC Category: 2
FDACS Listed Noxious Weed: No
Introduction Date: Earliest Florida specimen vouchered in 1943
IFAS Assessment:
Succulent, perennial herb to 1.5 m tall. The stems are hollow, fleshy, dark green. Leaves are scalloped and red along margins. Flowers are bell-like and pendulous.
Coastal uplands, floodplain wetlands, mesic and xeric uplands
Often found along the edges of conservation lands where landscape materials have been dumped. Used as a medicinal plant by indigenous people in the Amazon for a wide variety of purposes.
Often found along edges of natural areas, generally as a result of discarded landscape material.
Dave's Garden. 2014. PlantFiles: Air Plant, Kalanchoe pinnata. http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/68271/. Accessed on June 20, 2014.
Langeland, K.A., J.A. Ferrell, B. Sellers, G.E. MacDonald, and R.K. Stocker. 2011. Integrated management of non-native plants in natural areas of Florida. EDIS publication SP 242. University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.
National Tropical Botanical Garden. 2014. Meet the Plants: Kalanchoe pinnata (Crassulaceae). http://ntbg.org/plants/plant_details.php?plantid=11825. Accessed June 26, 2014.
Wunderlin, R. P., and B. F. Hansen. 2008. Atlas of Florida Vascular Plants (http://florida.plantatlas.usf.edu/).[S. M. Landry and K. N. Campbell (application development), Florida Center for Community Design and Research.] Institute for Systematic Botany, University of South Florida, Tampa.