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All species Plant profile

Calico Plant

Alternanthera bettzickiana

Calico Plant shows patchwork colored leaves, opposite leaves, low branching stems, plus range context, ecology, soil notes, and field marks for careful identification.

  • patchwork colored leaves
  • western South America, with many introduced or cultivated records elsewhere
  • soil and habitat clues
  • cautionary context only
Calico Plant showing field marks for identification.
Image: Photo by David J. Stang · CC BY-SA 4.0

At a glance

  • TypeHerb or garden plant
  • Rangewestern South America, with many introduced or cultivated records elsewhere
  • SizeLow herb or subshrub used in warm gardens
  • Field markspatchwork colored leaves, opposite leaves, low branching stems
  • Seasonwarm-season foliage; small pale flowers
Range & community finds

Where it grows in the wild

The map combines cited native or introduced range layers with reported public biodiversity observations.12

Field marks

How to recognize it

Look for patchwork colored leaves, opposite leaves, low branching stems before relying on one clue.

Patchwork Colored Leaves

Patchwork Colored Leaves is one practical field mark to photograph when checking Calico Plant in context.

Opposite Leaves

Opposite Leaves is one practical field mark to photograph when checking Calico Plant in context.

Low Branching Stems

Low Branching Stems is one practical field mark to photograph when checking Calico Plant in context.

Don't mix it up

Lookalikes & how to tell them apart

Compare Calico Plant with nearby plants that share shape, habitat, color, or family traits.

Coleus

Use multiple field marks together. Compare leaf shape, flower form, size, season, and setting before relying on a single similarity.

Other Alternanthera species

Use multiple field marks together. Compare leaf shape, flower form, size, season, and setting before relying on a single similarity.

The story

Patchwork leaves along a warm edge

Calico Plant first asks for a close look. Notice patchwork colored leaves, then check opposite leaves and low branching stems before the setting blurs into background. The plant becomes clearer when the field mark and the place are seen together: leaf, flower, stem, soil, light, and the edge where it is growing.

The first public record behind this page came from a community discovery on 2026-07-02. That record gives the profile a real starting point without turning the plant into a private location. It points to a subject worth studying with care, especially because Calico Plant can be confused with plants that share color, family, habitat, or growth form.

Calico Plant is a warm-region foliage plant whose leaves can carry green, red, pink, yellow, or copper patches on one low stem. That is the simple line to carry outside. The deeper story is that low tropical foliage plant that paints garden edges with patchwork leaves. A field guide can list parts, but the living plant is doing something in a place. It is holding a patch, climbing toward light, feeding visitors, storing water, or waiting through a season until the right signal appears.

Range adds another clue. The cited distribution records place Calico Plant in western South America, with many introduced or cultivated records elsewhere. The map on this page separates recorded observations from the broader range context, so the dots do not pretend to be the whole story. A plant can be common in cultivation, rare in the wild, locally abundant, or scattered far from its original home.

Identification should move slowly. Look for patchwork colored leaves, compare opposite leaves, and photograph low branching stems with the whole plant nearby. A close image is useful, but a wider image often explains scale, soil, shade, water, bark, wall, path, pot, meadow, or forest edge. Those ordinary surroundings can keep a guess honest.

The soil or substrate matters here. Calico Plant is not only a shape above ground. Its roots, rhizomes, host tissues, trunk base, or lower stems meet the surface that feeds and steadies it. Leaf litter, sand, disturbed soil, wet ground, bark, or potting mix can show how the plant holds its place while weather and season change around it.

Human attention adds another layer, but caution keeps it useful. Food or medicinal claims are not used as guidance; this page keeps the plant in identification, range, and garden-ecology context. That boundary lets the page mention history, garden use, scent, sap, fruit, or folklore without turning a species profile into instructions. The safest reader action is observation: look, photograph, compare, and leave uncertain plants alone.

Calico Plant is grown for leaves that can show several colors at once, turning foliage rather than flowers into the main field mark. In the field, that fact works best when it sends the eye back to the plant. Watch how the visible parts fit the role. Are the flowers signaling to insects or birds? Are the leaves storing water or catching light? Is the stem climbing, sprawling, bristling, or standing firm through wind?

Season changes the answer. warm-season foliage and small pale flowers may show different sides of the same plant. A flower can vanish while leaves remain. A fruit can explain what a bloom was doing weeks earlier. A dry stem can mark where summer growth once stood.

For a useful observation, photograph Calico Plant in three steps: the whole plant in its setting, one close field mark, and the ground or substrate at its base. Then compare the lookalikes rather than naming from memory. The point is not speed. The point is to let one plant reveal how much is happening in a small patch of living ground.

Ecology

Its place in the ecological web

Calico Plant acts as low tropical foliage plant that paints garden edges with patchwork leaves, linking visible field marks with soil, season, and other organisms.

Soil & substrate

Soil & substrate

Calico Plant is best read with its substrate in view. Soil, litter, bark, sand, potting mix, or disturbed ground helps explain where the plant holds, climbs, stores, or flowers in the local habitat.3

Foliage color signal

Foliage color signal

Foliage color signal is part of how Calico Plant fits into a larger living scene rather than standing as an isolated label.36

Warm-edge cover

Warm-edge cover

Warm-edge cover connects Calico Plant with season, shelter, movement, or food-web timing described in the sources.36

Timing

When to look

Seasonal timing helps readers know when Calico Plant is easiest to recognize: warm-season foliage, small pale flowers may each carry a different clue.3

Leaves
Flowers
  • Peak bloom
  • Fading & dried heads
  • Leaves out
In Leafari

Found one? Keep a field journal

Save this species to your journal, earn its badge, and see community discoveries on an approximate, privacy-safe map.

  1. 1Photograph the whole Calico Plant plant in its setting.
  2. 2Add a close view of patchwork colored leaves.
  3. 3Record soil, moisture, shade, edge, garden, woodland, or disturbed-ground context.
  4. 4Compare lookalikes before relying on one feature.
Calico Plant badge art from the app.

Calico Plant Badge

Earned when you identify this species in Leafari.

In the Leafari community

1Total finds logged
1Explorers journaled it

First found in Shan State, Myanmar, by Curious-Captain-4

References

Sources

Key facts and claims trace back to a named reference. Superscript numbers in the text link here.

  1. WCVP distribution records via GBIF: Alternanthera bettzickiana Taxonomy and range source checked
  2. Global biodiversity occurrence record: Alternanthera bettzickiana Distribution observations and taxon key
  3. POWO taxon record: Alternanthera bettzickiana Natural-history and range reference
  4. Wikimedia Commons hero image Hero image
  5. Wikimedia Commons supporting image Supporting image
  6. Community discovery records Product snapshot, first found, fun facts, badge, community discovery