Java fern narrow leaf
Microsorum pteropus
Also known as: Microsorum pteropus 'narrow', narrow leaf java fern
Quick facts
- Max height
- 25 cm
- Growth rate
- slow
- Difficulty
- beginner
- Placement
- midground, background
- Propagation
- rhizome division
Water parameters
- Temperature
- 18–28°C
- pH
- 5.0 to 8.0
- Hardness
- 0 to 25 dGH
- Brackish
- tolerated
Light and nutrients
- Lighting
- low
- CO2
- not required, but boosts growth and color
- Substrate
- epiphyte
- Feeding
- feeds from the water column (use liquid fertilizer)
Substrate
What this plant roots into (or attaches to). The substrate affects both plant nutrition and water chemistry; see each linked page for full effects.
| Substrate | pH effect | Nutrient load |
|---|---|---|
| Wood and rock mounts (Hardscape mount) | varies by source | none |
| Inert sand (Pool filter sand) | neutral / inert | none |
| Inert gravel (Aquarium gravel) | neutral / inert | none |
| Bare bottom (no substrate) (Bare bottom) | not applicable | none |
| Aquasoil (ADA Amazonia) | lowers pH | very high |
| Mineralized clay substrate (Seachem Fluorite) | neutral / inert | moderate |
This plant feeds primarily from the water column, so substrate choice matters more for its fish-tank compatibility than for plant nutrition.
With fish
- Plant-eating fish
- safe with plant-eating fish (tough leaves or unpalatable)
- Diggers (corydoras, loaches)
- fine - root system or attachment style handles it
- Root-disturbing fish
- tolerates fish that disturb roots
Habitat
A cultivar or natural variant of Microsorum pteropus selected for narrow, elongated fronds. The narrow-leaf form produces fronds 15–25 cm long but only 1–2 cm wide, giving the plant a grassy, flowing appearance that's quite different from the broad-leaved standard form. The thin fronds sway in current, adding movement to the aquascape. Native origin is Southeast Asia, same as standard Java fern. This form has been popular in the aquascaping hobby for its ability to create naturalistic, flowing backgrounds and midgrounds on hardscape. Available from most aquatic plant retailers as potted or tissue culture specimens. The narrow-leaf Java fern is also sold under trade names like 'Needle Leaf' and occasionally confused with Java fern 'Trident', which has forked rather than simply narrow fronds. The distinction matters aesthetically: Trident has finger-like leaf projections, while Narrow Leaf has smooth, unforked margins. Both are easy to grow with the same care requirements as standard Java fern.
Care notes
Identical care to standard Java fern: attach rhizome to hardscape, do not bury in substrate. Low to moderate light, no CO2 required. Tolerates wide ranges of pH (5.5-8.0), hardness (GH 2-20), and temperature (20–28°C). Growth is slow to moderate. The narrow fronds are more prone to algae issues than the standard form because the thin leaf area means each frond has less capacity to shade out algal growth. In high-light tanks without CO2, keep the light moderate and maintain a cleanup crew. Propagation by rhizome division and adventitious plantlets on fronds, same as standard Java fern. The narrow form is particularly effective when attached to tall, vertical pieces of driftwood, where the flowing fronds create a curtain effect. Multiple plants attached along a branch create a naturalistic tree-root or river-grass look that's popular in biotope and nature aquariums. Trim old fronds at the base. The narrow growth means the plant takes up less visual weight than the standard form, making it suitable for smaller tanks (40 L) where standard Java fern would look too heavy. Compatible with all fish; the tough, leathery leaves are unpalatable to most herbivores. An excellent choice for tanks with plant-eating fish like goldfish, African cichlids, and silver dollars.
Plan a tank with Java fern narrow leaf
Verified against: tropica, buce-plant. Last reviewed 2026-05-15.