Houseplant Acclimatization: What It Is, What to Expect, and How to Support It
Why Your New Plant Looks Unhappy
You just brought home a stunning new plant. You placed it in just the right spot, gave it a careful drink, maybe even picked a name. Then the yellowing starts. Leaves curl. A few drop. Suddenly, that once-lush plant looks like itâs struggling.
Donât panic. This is totally normal.
What youâre seeing is acclimation â the biological adjustment every houseplant goes through when it enters a new environment. And most plant owners arenât told how real, necessary, and predictable this phase is.
Hereâs the thing: it doesnât matter whether your plant came from a tropical greenhouse, a boutique shop down the road, or an online store â itâs now in a completely different climate. Your home has new light levels, lower humidity, unfamiliar air flow, a different watering rhythm, and an unpredictable temperature pattern.
Some plants adjust quickly. Others take a month or more. But the bottom line is this: acclimation isnât a sign of failure. Itâs how your plant survives the transition â and how it eventually thrives.
What This Guide Covers
What acclimation actually means (in simple terms)
Why every houseplant, even the âeasyâ ones, goes through it
What changes in your home trigger stress
How to tell normal adjustment signs from real problems
What you can do to support your plant through the process
If youâve ever watched a healthy-looking plant decline after bringing it home, this is the missing piece.
Even healthy plants like Alocasia 'Dragon Scale' may drop a yellowing leaf or two while adjusting â itâs not a failure, itâs the start of acclimatization.
Acclimation sounds technical, but the concept is simple:
Your plant is adjusting to your homeâs conditions â and it may look worse before it looks better.
When a plant moves from one environment to another, like from a warm, bright, humid greenhouse into your living room, it doesnât just react temporarily. It has to adapt on a cellular level. This process is slow, but itâs not random â and itâs not a sign your plant is dying.
Think of it like jet lag. Your plant has left a perfectly timed, high-end hotel (the greenhouse) and is now figuring out how to function in an unfamiliar place with new rhythms, new lighting, new moisture levels, and new expectations.
Itâs not being dramatic. Itâs adapting to survive.
What Happens Right After You Bring a Plant Home
Most houseplants show some signs of stress during their first few weeks in a new environment. This is the visible part of acclimatization â and itâs often misread as disease or bad care.
The truth? Most of these symptoms are completely normal.
Below are the common short-term changes many plants go through after arriving in your home.
Typical Adjustment Signs (Seen Within 1â3 Weeks):
Older (usually lower) leaves turn yellow and drop
New leaves look smaller, duller, or differently shaped
Mild wilting or soft, limp stems despite moist soil
Edges of leaves curl or crisp, especially in drier air
Growth slows downâor stops altogether
Unless these symptoms are severe or spreading quickly, theyâre not signs of failure. Theyâre signs your plant is hitting the biological âresetâ button.
Whatâs Actually Going On Inside the Plant
While these symptoms might seem random, they reflect real physical changes happening beneath the surface. Your plant isnât reacting emotionally â itâs actively rewiring itself to cope with its new indoor climate.
Hereâs what changes on a cellular level:
1. Photosynthesis Slows Down
Lower light levels in your home mean your plant canât produce as much energy. As a result, it shifts resources from growth to survival. Thatâs why growth often pauses entirely in the first few weeks.
2. Stomata Behavior Changes
Stomata are the tiny pores on the undersides of leaves that control water loss. In high humidity, they stay open. In dry air, they close more frequently. This slows water movement through the plant â and can make stems feel soft or droopy.
3. Leaf Structure Shifts
New growth may emerge smaller, thinner, or darker than before. Thatâs not a sign of decline â itâs a new leaf built specifically for your homeâs light levels. Meanwhile, older leaves that were adapted to the previous environment may be dropped entirely.
4. Hormones Rebalance
Your plant reprioritizes. It stops investing in new shoots or flowers and focuses instead on maintaining critical functions. This means growth may pause even if conditions are still good.
5. Root Activity Adapts
Roots also slow down during this time, especially if the plant is overwatered or sitting in compacted soil. If roots arenât getting enough oxygen, they stop expanding â and may even shed fine root hairs temporarily.
đThe Takeaway:
What looks like stress is often just transition. The leaves your plant loses arenât wasted â they were designed for another environment. New growth will be tailored to your home.
All your plant needs right now is stability. No repotting. No extra fertilizer. No panic.
Freshly shipped houseplants often arrive stressed â a yellowing, curled, or wilted leaf is common in the first days of acclimatization.
How Long Does Acclimation Take?
Acclimation isnât a race â itâs a recovery period. How long it takes depends on your plantâs species, maturity, and the size of the climate shift. Some adjust in under two weeks. Others need two months or more.
Hereâs a rough guide by plant type:
Fast Adjusters (1â3 weeks):
Epipremnum aureum (Pothos)
Spathiphyllum (Peace Lily)
Sansevieria (Snake Plant)
Moderate Adjusters (3â6 weeks):
Philodendron spp.
Dracaena spp.
Monstera adansonii
Sensitive Species (4â8+ weeks):
Goeppertia / Calathea spp.
Ficus lyrata (Fiddle Leaf Fig)
Anthurium spp.
Most ferns and moisture-loving tropicals
How You Know Your Plant Has Settled In
Watch for these signs that your plant is adapting to your homeâs conditions:
Leaf drop slows down or stops completely
New leaves emerge and match your homeâs light (not the old greenhouse look)
Growth resumes at a slow, steady pace
You start to notice a predictable watering rhythm
Once you see these changes, your plant is no longer in survival mode. Itâs growing againâon your homeâs terms.
đ Reminder:
No two plants adjust on the same timeline. Donât compare your new Calathea to your neighborâs Philodendron. One evolved in stable rainforest understory, the other on open forest edges. Different biology, different expectations.
Most tropical houseplants evolved in dense rainforests â stable humidity, filtered light, and living soils are their natural baseline.
Why Your Home Feels Like a Foreign Planet to Your Plant
To understand why acclimation happens, it helps to look at where your plant came from and how different your home really is by comparison.
Most indoor plants have taken a long journey:
From wild ecosystems â to climate-controlled greenhouses â to your hallway shelf.
Thatâs not just a change of scenery â itâs a complete environmental shift.
Environment 1: Native Habitat â Where the Species Evolved
In the wild, tropical plants thrive in rich, consistent microclimates. Think warm, shady jungle floors or misty mountain slopes.
Key traits of native environments:
Warm, stable temperatures year-round
Humidity often between 80â100%
Filtered, indirect light from above (not from the side)
Active, living soil with constant moisture cycling
Before reaching your home, most plants were grown in production greenhouses â optimized for speed, not long-term survival.
Typical greenhouse conditions:
Bright, diffuse overhead light (up to 10,000+ lux)
80â90% humidity kept constant by misting or foggers
Stable temperatures between 21â28 °C
No wind, no drafts, no temperature swings
Timed watering and automated fertilization
These are ideal growing conditions â but theyâre nothing like whatâs waiting in a regular home.
Environment 3: Your Home â A New Microclimate Entirely
Now your plant faces:
Directional, side-lit light â often <2,000 lux, especially in winter
Indoor air with 20â50% humidity, or lower in heated rooms
Variable temperatures: hot days, cool nights, drafts, vents
Human-controlled watering â sometimes too much, sometimes too little
Pets, kids, open windows, heaters, and unexpected stress
Each room has its own mini-climate. Your kitchen might be hot and dry, while your bathroom is humid but dark.
In commercial greenhouses, plants enjoy stable warmth, bright diffuse light, and constant humidity â nothing like your living room.
At a Glance: Environment Comparison
Condition
Native Habitat
Greenhouse
Your Home
Light
Filtered, overhead
Bright, diffuse
Directional, often low
Humidity
80â100%
80â90%
20â60%, varies daily
Temperature
Constant
Constant
Fluctuates by room/season
Soil
Living, aerated
Fast-draining mix
May be compacted or wet
Stress Factors
None (adapted)
None (controlled)
Drafts, dryness, low light
đ The Takeaway:
Your plant didnât just move across town. It changed ecosystems. Acclimation is the only way it can survive that leap.
What Physically Changes During Acclimation
Your plant isnât sulking. Itâs transforming.
When a houseplant enters a new environment, it doesn't just react on the surface â it reprograms itself at a cellular level. Leaf drop, slowed growth, and structural changes arenât emotional responses. Theyâre biological adaptations.
Hereâs whatâs actually happening.
1. Leaf Structure Changes â Out with the Old, In with the Adapted
Greenhouse-grown leaves were designed for intense overhead light and constant humidity. When those conditions vanish, older leaves quickly become inefficient.
What youâll see:
Larger or lighter-colored leaves turn yellow and drop
New leaves grow smaller, firmer, and often darker
Leaf shape may change slightly as the plant optimizes for lower light
This isnât damage â itâs replacement. Your plant is trading out old equipment for tools that work better in your space.
If âbright, indirect lightâ feels vague and unhelpful, youâre not alone â we broke it down with real numbers and tools:
Drooping leaves or yellowing foliage doesnât mean your plant is dying â itâs recalibrating to your space.
How Long Do These Changes Take?
Hereâs a general timeline for visible adjustments and new growth, by plant type:
Pothos, Snake Plant â Leaf changes in 1â2 weeks; new growth by 3â4 weeks
Fiddle-Leaf Fig â Leaf changes in 3â4 weeks; new growth may take 4â6+ weeks
Calatheas, Ferns, Anthuriums â May need 4â6+ weeks for leaf loss to slow; new growth appears after 6â8+ weeks
đ Acclimation is a physical transformation â not a temporary dip.
The plant you brought home is building a new version of itself, shaped by your light, humidity, temperature, and care style.
Let it do that without rushing it.
Why Every Home Is a Unique Microclimate
Youâve followed the care advice. You placed your new plant in the same window your friend uses. Same species, same direction, same city â but your plant is struggling, and theirs is thriving.
Thatâs because no two homes provide the same environment. Even small differences in layout, lighting, habits, or airflow can create wildly different growing conditions.
Letâs break down why.
â Light Isnât Just About Direction
Youâve probably heard âbright indirect lightâ a hundred times â but itâs not a fixed amount.
A south-facing window in one home may be shaded by trees or buildings. Another might get full afternoon sun. Even factors like curtains, wall colors, window tint, or how far the plant is from the glass will drastically change light intensity.
Moving a plant just one meter further from a window can reduce usable light by 70â80%. Two similar homes can produce completely different light levels in the same room.
Curious how different window directions affect light levels throughout the day? Get the full breakdown here:
Air movement affects transpiration and moisture retention â and most homes have uneven airflow.
Things that change the equation:
Open windows or sealed insulation
Ceiling fans, heaters, or vents
Cold drafts from entryways or balconies
Warm air from kitchen appliances
Some plants will wilt near a vent even if everything else is right. Others might crisp up from still, dry air.
Same room type, different outcomes â humidity, airflow, and usage patterns make each bathroom a unique microclimate.
â Humidity Varies â Even in the Same Room Type
Bathrooms and kitchens are often assumed to be high-humidity zones. But thatâs not always true.
What affects humidity in a room:
How often someone showers or cooks
Whether the door is kept closed
Heating or ventilation systems
Windows that let in dry winter air
A Calathea that thrives in one personâs bathroom may crisp in anotherâs if thereâs poor air circulation or heating overhead.
â Humans Create Microclimates Too
How you live affects how your plant lives.
Consider:
Watering habits â scheduled or by feel?
Potting mix â airy or compacted?
Do you mist or not?
Do you use a hygrometer or guess?
Are pets knocking things over? Is there foot traffic? Do you rotate the pot?
Two homes can be side by side â but the way the people inside live creates completely different environments for a plant.
đ Understanding all this makes all the difference.
Instead of copying someone elseâs care setup, observe what your space is actually like. Thatâs the first step toward helping your plant not just survive, but adapt successfully.
Still placing plants based on Pinterest aesthetics or "bathroom plant" lists? Hereâs why that logic backfires â and what really matters:
Before you brought it home, your plant lived in near-perfect conditions â bright light, no drafts, and fully automated care.
From Greenhouse Luxury to Living Room Reality
The plant you brought home spent its early life in conditions built for growth â not for real life.
Commercial greenhouses are like botanical spas: everything from light to humidity to nutrition is perfectly controlled.
Then suddenly⊠your plant is in a living room with dry air, unpredictable light, and a cat that keeps batting its leaves.
Thatâs not a small shift. Itâs an ecological reset.
Light Levels â Not Even Close
Greenhouse: Bright, diffuse, overhead light from all angles â often 10,000 lux or more.
Living room: Light usually comes from one side only, and often falls below 2,000 lux, especially in winter.
What happens:
Older leaves adapted to high light may yellow or drop
New growth appears smaller, thicker, or darker
Some species stop growing entirely until conditions stabilize
Even a window that feels âbrightâ to you may not be bright enough for the plantâs previous settings.
Humidity â The Silent Stress Factor
Greenhouse: Humidity consistently held at 70â90%
Living room: Often drops below 40%, especially with heating or AC
What happens:
Leaves develop crispy edges or curled margins
Transpiration slows down â so water stays in the pot longer, confusing watering schedules
New leaves may fail to unfurl properly in humidity-sensitive species
Dry air is one of the biggest reasons plants âdeclineâ after moving indoors â and most people donât realize it until damage is done.
Temperature and Air Movement â Stable vs Chaotic
Greenhouse: Warmth held between 21â28 °C with no drafts, vents, or sudden changes
Living room: Temperatures rise and fall with the time of day, the weather, or the heating system
What happens:
Cold air from a window or door can shock roots or leaf tissue
Warm dry air from a vent can desiccate leaves, even if the room âfeels fineâ
Microclimate shifts delay acclimatization by keeping the plant in a state of stress
Even âtoughâ plants can show damage when placed near radiators, AC vents, or frequently opened doors.
Watering and Soil â From Precision to Guesswork
Greenhouse: Irrigation is timed, measured, and automated; substrates are engineered for drainage
Living room: Watering is manual, irregular, and based on human perception
What happens:
Roots grown in oxygen-rich substrate may stagnate in compact home soil
Overwatering becomes common, especially when light and humidity drop
Fungus gnats and root rot are frequent symptoms of overadjustment
Inconsistent moisture is one of the biggest triggers for post-purchase plant decline â and most of it starts with the pot, not the person.
Quick Recap â What Just Changed for Your Plant
Factor
Before (Greenhouse)
After (Your Home)
Light
Overhead, bright, even
Directional, dimmer, variable
Humidity
80â90%
Often below 50%
Temperature
Stable
Fluctuates daily
Watering
Automated, precise
Inconsistent, hand-controlled
Air Movement
Gentle, uniform
Still, drafty, or turbulent
đ This isnât about your care quality â itâs about your conditions.
The shift from a greenhouse to a home is drastic, and plants need time to rebuild systems that match their new environment.
Not all plants take change lightly â Ctenanthe and other sensitive species may respond with curled leaves, crispy edges, or tip browning.
Why Some Plants Adjust Easily â and Others Struggle
Ever noticed how a pothos keeps growing no matter what you throw at it, while your Calathea acts offended if you so much as breathe near it?
That difference isnât random â it comes down to how a plant evolved, how it was grown, and how much it needs consistency.
1. Some Plants Are Just Built Tougher
Species that evolved in variable environments â like open forests or semi-arid zones â tend to handle change better. These plants can roll with light fluctuations, missed waterings, or dry air.
Plants that tolerate environmental shifts well:
Epipremnum aureum (Pothos)
Zamioculcas zamiifolia (ZZ Plant)
Dracaena trifasciata (Snake Plant)
Aspidistra elatior (Cast Iron Plant)
These are the no-fuss houseplants â theyâll survive a draft, bounce back from under-watering, and tolerate your dry winter air without protest.
2. Others Come from Stable, Specific Ecosystems
Many sensitive species evolved in tropical understories or humid cloud forests â places where temperature, moisture, and light levels barely change.
Plants that struggle with sudden shifts:
Calathea and Goeppertia species
Ficus lyrata (Fiddle Leaf Fig)
Anthuriums with thin or velvety leaves
Adiantum (Maidenhair Ferns)
These plants donât like surprises. Even small changes in humidity or placement can cause leaf curl, drop, or stalled growth.
Theyâre not âdivasâ â theyâre just designed for consistency.
3. Leaf Type and Light History Make a Difference
Leaves that formed in bright greenhouse light are built thicker and larger. When placed in dimmer indoor light, theyâre no longer efficient and are often shed.
What to expect:
Older leaves yellow and fall off
New leaves emerge smaller and better adapted to your conditions
Thatâs not failure â thatâs success.
Your plant is producing growth that matches your homeâs reality.
4. Bigger Plants Have More to Lose
Larger, mature plants often take longer to adjust because:
They have more tissue to support
They were more dependent on their previous environment
They need to rebuild more systems before they can thrive
Smaller or younger plants often bounce back faster, especially if they were recently propagated or rooted under lower light.
5. The Bigger the Gap, the Longer the Adjustment
A plant going from 90% humidity and stable warmth to a dry apartment with cold nights needs time â and patience.
Even âeasyâ plants will show signs of stress if the transition is extreme. The greater the change in conditions, the slower the recovery.
6. Health on Arrival Matters
A freshly watered, pest-free plant with a strong root system will adjust faster.
But if it arrives:
Dehydrated or cold from shipping
Overwatered and rootbound
Carrying hidden stress from poor handling
âŠthen it may need a recovery period before it even starts acclimating.
Acclimation Speed by Example
Plant
General Tolerance
Acclimation Time
Pothos, ZZ Plant
High
1â2 weeks
Peace Lily, Fiddle Leaf
Moderate
3â5 weeks
Calathea, Ferns, Ficus
Low
4â8+ weeks
đ Knowing how your plant is wired helps you adjust your care â and your expectations.
Itâs not about getting it perfect. Itâs about giving the plant what it needs while it builds a new version of itself in your home.
Labeling plants as "difficult" often misses the point. It's not the plant â itâs the setup. Hereâs why that mindset needs to go:
With patience, observation and stability tropical plants can thrive in stable, indoor microclimates.
10 Tips to Help Your Plant Acclimate Smoothly
You donât need tricks, sprays, or daily rituals to help your new plant settle in. You just need consistency, a little restraint, and some smart placement choices.
Hereâs what actually works:
1. Start in Bright, Indirect Light
Sudden exposure to full sun can burn leaves, especially after shipping or store display. Place your plant near a bright window with filtered light. South or east-facing is ideal, but avoid harsh direct rays for the first two weeks.
Not sure what âbright, indirect lightâ is supposed to look like?
Avoid placing your plant near radiators, heaters, fans, or cold windows.
Fluctuating air currents and temperature shocks slow down recovery or trigger leaf drop.
7. Donât Move It Around
Find a stable spot and leave it there.
Constant movement resets the plantâs internal calibration. Let it settle in one place unless conditions are clearly wrong.
8. Expect Some Leaf Drop â Donât Panic
Yellowing or dropping leaves are normal.
Prune only fully dead or dry ones. If itâs still partially green, leave it â the plant might still be drawing nutrients from it.
9. Wait for New Growth Before Making Big Changes
Once you see fresh leaves that look healthy and stable, the plant is ready for things like repotting, fertilizing, or propagation.
Until then, less is more.
10. Be Patient â Thatâs the Whole Game
Most plants need at least 3â6 weeks to fully adjust.
'Fussy' species? Give it 8 or more. Donât rush it, donât overcorrect, and donât take every yellow leaf personally.
Bonus Tip: Quarantine New Arrivals
Keep new plants separate from your main collection for about two weeks.
This helps you watch for pests, assess health, and reduce the risk of spreading anything unwanted while it settles in.
đ This is where most plant owners either succeed or sabotage themselves:
Trying to fix something that isnât broken. If you focus on low stress, steady light, and hands-off observation, the plant will do the rest.
Common Myths About Acclimation â And Why Theyâre Holding You Back
A lot of plant owners get frustrated not because theyâre doing something wrong â but because they were told the wrong things. Here are the most common myths about acclimatization, and whatâs actually true.
âI bought the plant locally, so it should already be used to my climate.â
Nope. The plantâs location at the time of sale tells you nothing about how it was grown.
Most plants â even those sold at neighborhood shops â were raised in controlled greenhouses. Bright light, high humidity, stable temps. None of those match your home.
Distance doesnât matter. Difference does.
âIt says âpre-acclimatedâ on the label, so it should be fine indoors.â
Maybe. But âpre-acclimatedâ usually means:
Grown under shade cloth or reduced light
Given less water to build tolerance
Kept in softer retail conditions for a short period
Thatâs helpful, but it doesnât replace the need to adjust to your exact space. Pre-acclimated isnât pre-adapted.
âIndoor plantâ means it should be happy anywhere inside, right?â
Wrong. âIndoor plantâ just means it can survive indoors â not that it thrives in all rooms.
A dark hallway, dry bedroom, or breezy entryway can stress even the toughest tropicals. âIndoorâ is a general category, not a quality guarantee.
âSome leaves are dropping â something must be wrong.â
Not necessarily. Losing a few older leaves is one of the most common signs of normal adjustment. Plants shed inefficient or light-adapted leaves to conserve energy. Itâs not damage â itâs strategy.
Worry only if:
New growth dies back
All leaves drop quickly
Stem or root rot is present
âThe plant arrived wilted after shipping â it must be poor quality.â
Shipping stress is inevitable. Three days in a dark box with temperature swings, jostling, and dry air will make any living organism react. That doesnât mean the plant was bad â it means itâs alive.
Let it rest. Water gently. Give it time.
đĄForget the labels.
Forget the promises of âeasy careâ or âindestructible.â Every plant â even the common ones â needs a transition window.
Some yellow leaves arenât the end of the world (or your plant) â theyâre part of the process. Support your plant, donât overcorrect.
From Surviving to Thriving â What Acclimation Success Actually Looks Like
Bringing home a plant isnât the finish line â itâs the start of a new phase. Whether your plant came in perfect condition or a bit bruised from transit, what happens next depends on how it adapts to your specific space.
Acclimation is that process. Not a failure. Not a flaw. Just biology.
Hereâs what to realistically expect â and what progress actually looks like.
What Might Happen Early On:
A few older leaves yellow and drop
Growth stalls for several weeks
Water needs become unpredictable
The plant looks less âfullâ than it did in the store
This isnât backsliding. Itâs recalibrating.
What Recovery Looks Like:
Leaf loss slows or stops entirely
New leaves begin to emerge and stay
Color and shape of new growth match your lighting
Watering frequency becomes more consistent
The plant maintains its form â and begins to expand
Once that starts, you can resume normal care â repotting if needed, fertilizing carefully, and considering propagation if the plant is strong.
Success Isnât About Looks â Itâs About Stability
Donât judge your plant by how lush it looked on arrival. That version was designed for greenhouse display.
Judge it by how well it holds steady, adapts, and regrows in your home â even if it takes weeks to get there.
Quick Recap: What to Expect from Plant Acclimation
Phase
What Youâll Notice
What It Means
Days 1â7
Yellowing leaves, droop, leaf drop
Normal stress signs â donât panic
Weeks 2â4
Pause in growth, fewer water needs
Energy shift and internal adaptation
Weeks 4â8
New leaves, stable watering rhythm
Acclimatization is working
After Week 8 (if stable)
Growth resumes, plant holds form
Success â plant is now adjusted
Still Seeing Problems After 8+ Weeks?
If your plant:
Keeps dropping healthy-looking leaves
Shows no sign of new growth
Is constantly wilted or soggy
Has patchy black or soft areas
âŠthen youâre likely dealing with something beyond acclimation â possibly root rot, pest issues, or unsuitable conditions. At that point, dig deeper (literally, if needed) and reassess lighting, substrate, and root health.
Shift Your Mindset: From Panic to Partnership
Most plants donât die from stress â they die from overreaction. If you intervene too often, repot too early, or flood the roots every time a leaf droops, you interrupt their process.
Acclimation isnât passive. Itâs active survival. Your job is to provide stable conditions while the plant rewrites its strategy.
Let it.
Sources and Further Reading:
Gjindali, A., & Johnson, G. N. (2023). Photosynthetic acclimation to changing environments. Biochemical Society Transactions, 51(2), 473â486.
â Reviews how plants regulate photosynthetic processes in response to variable light and environmental stress â essential for understanding growth slowdown during acclimatization.
Kleine, T., NĂ€gele, T., Neuhaus, H. E., Schmitz-Linneweber, C., Fernie, A. R., Geigenberger, P., Grimm, B., ⊠The Green Hub Consortium. (2021). Acclimation in plants â the Green Hub consortium. The Plant Journal, 106(1), 23â40.
â Explores why studying plant responses to fluctuating environments matters â highly relevant to home microclimate variability.
Sugano, S., Ishii, M., & Tanabe, S. (2024). Adaptation of indoor ornamental plants to various lighting levels in growth chambers simulating workplace environments. Scientific Reports, 14, Article 17424. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-67877-y
â Experimental study testing how common houseplants adapt to indoor light conditions â directly informs acclimatization strategies.
Trinklein, D. (2016, November 8). Houseplant acclimatization. University of Missouri Extension.
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