Houseplants with true healing powers


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Chemicals from building materials, furniture, and even air fresheners can make indoor air toxic, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. This can trigger allergy attacks and even increase your risk of colds and flu. But certain plants can help, says B.C. Wolverton, PhD, a former NASA research scientist and the author of How to Grow Fresh Air.

?Houseplants give off oxygen and help remove chemicals like formaldehyde, a common indoor vapor that can cause respiratory and neurological problems, as well as cancer,? he says. These five great picks may not cure asthma, but they can help you breathe easier.

English Ivy

Available in all kinds of colors and shapes, this climbing vine helps clear out formaldehyde. It?s superversatile, too: You can grow it in hanging baskets, low planters, or even as a topiary. It needs regular misting, though, especially during winter.

Bamboo Palm

Great at removing formaldehyde from the air, the bamboo palm is also low-maintenance: Just put it where it?ll get a couple of hours of direct sunlight, and water it regularly.

Peace Lily

A pro at removing a laundry list of toxins, including acetone, benzene, alcohols, and ammonia, the peace lily is the only air-cleaning plant on our list that flowers. To keep it healthy and insect-free, you?ll need to wash the leaves occasionally.

Lady palm

This plant clears your air of chemicals, including ammonia, and is highly resistant to insects. It?s fairly easy to care for, but you?ll need to trim the leaf tips if they turn brown from a buildup of salt and minerals.

Rubber plant

Got a black thumb? The hearty rubber plant is for you. It ranks high at eradicating nasty formaldehyde and can tolerate cooler temperatures and low light. You just need to keep it well-watered.

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Rubber plant

Got a black thumb? The hearty rubber plant is for you. It ranks high at eradicating nasty formaldehyde and can tolerate cooler temperatures and low light. You just need to keep it well-watered.

I might could manage that.

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When all the formaldehyde is gone then the plants are just pretty. However I don't think formaldehyde will ever be gone.

I just read the wiki article on formaldehyde, i'm glad i'm not a hypochondriac.

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minor correction: plants give off oxygen and use co2 during the daytime to make sugars via photosynthesis. at night they give off co2 and use oxygen to burn the days sugars just like any other living thing. they, like us, are a carbon 'sink' because we use carbon to make the solid structures of our bodies. also, we both either 'give up' our carbon when we die and decay, or pass it on when we are eaten. or both.

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minor correction: plants give off oxygen and use co2 during the daytime to make sugars via photosynthesis. at night they give off co2 and use oxygen to burn the days sugars just like any other living thing. they, like us, are a carbon 'sink' because we use carbon to make the solid structures of our bodies. also, we both either 'give up' our carbon when we die and decay, or pass it on when we are eaten. or both.

Plants need water and nutrients from the soil, but they grow by absorbing the carbon from carbon dioxide. Even if the plants do let off CO2 at night, they still absorb more than they release. Then if the plant is decaying/dying, you simply throw it out before all that carbon becomes part of the air again.

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minor correction: plants give off oxygen and use co2 during the daytime to make sugars via photosynthesis. at night they give off co2 and use oxygen to burn the days sugars just like any other living thing. they, like us, are a carbon 'sink' because we use carbon to make the solid structures of our bodies. also, we both either 'give up' our carbon when we die and decay, or pass it on when we are eaten. or both.

people still don't understand that cows are carbon neutral and that their "gas" problems don't make them walking carbon factories.

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