Japanese Anemone (Anemone hupehensis)

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Japanese Anemone Plant Care

Anemone hupehensis (Lemoine) Lemoine

Eriocapitella hupehensis, a species of flowering plant in the Ranunculaceae family of plants and has an extensive native distribution across a large area of Asia. The plant was previously known as Anemone hupehensis and is often still referred to as such.

🌼Perennials🧅Bulbs & Tubers
Water

Every 3–5 days

Light

Partial shade to full sun

Temp

50–75°F

Humidity

40–60%

What Is the Japanese Anemone?

Japanese Anemone (Anemone hupehensis) belongs to the Ranunculaceae family within the Anemone genus. Japanese Anemone is also known as Chinese Anemone, Grecian Windflower.

Japanese Anemone displays a clumping perennial growth habit, reaching up to 2 inches tall with a spread of approximately 1.5 inches. Japanese Anemone produces showy, colorful flowers in shades of white, pink, purple, or blue.

Leaf size: approximately 4 inches.

How Often Should You Water a Japanese Anemone?

Anemone hupehensis requires watering every 3–5 days. Allow the top layer of soil to dry between waterings to prevent root rot. Reduce watering frequency during winter when growth slows.

Watering Frequency

Every 3–5 days

Let soil partially dry between waterings

What Light Does the Japanese Anemone Need?

Japanese Anemone thrives in partial shade to full sun light conditions. The optimal light range is 100–1000 lux. Avoid placing Japanese Anemone in direct, harsh sunlight for extended periods, as this can scorch the foliage.

Light Requirement

Partial shade to full sun

100–1000 lux

What Temperature and Humidity Does the Japanese Anemone Prefer?

Anemone hupehensis grows best at temperatures between 50°F and 75°F. Japanese Anemone prefers humidity levels of 40–60%.

Temperature

50–75°F

Humidity

40–60%

What Soil Mix Works Best for a Japanese Anemone?

Rich, well-draining soil with plenty of organic matter. Good drainage is essential for Japanese Anemone to prevent waterlogging, which leads to root rot and fungal issues.

How Do You Repot a Japanese Anemone?

Divide and repot every 2-3 years in early spring. Choose a pot one size larger than the current container, and ensure it has drainage holes to allow excess water to escape.

How Do You Propagate a Japanese Anemone?

Japanese Anemone can be propagated through division, seeds. Similar propagation techniques also apply to canada anemone plant care, which shares the same genus.

Fertilizing

Every 6 months

During the growing season

Is the Japanese Anemone Toxic to Pets and Children?

Toxic to Pets & Children

Toxic if ingested, may cause skin irritation

What Pests and Diseases Affect the Japanese Anemone?

Japanese Anemone is susceptible to aphids, slugs, snails. Inspect the foliage regularly, especially along leaf undersides and stems. Treat infestations promptly with insecticidal soap or neem oil to prevent spread.

What USDA Hardiness Zone Does the Japanese Anemone Need?

Japanese Anemone grows outdoors in USDA Zone 12a. In cooler regions, grow Japanese Anemone as a houseplant or bring it indoors before the first frost.

Hardiness Zone

Zone 12a

Keep exploring plants

Japanese Anemone is one of many species covered in the complete plant care and identification guide, which groups plants by genus, attribute, and popularity.

It belongs to the Anemone genus — compare its care with other Anemone species on PlantoScan.

Japanese Anemone tolerates low-light rooms and shaded spots — browse the full list of low-light plants.

More Anemone Species

Other Anemone species in PlantoScan's care catalogue share similar watering, light, and soil preferences:

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