Aggregated insights from the PlantOS community
Browse species-level statistics, care patterns, and community findings. All data is anonymized and aggregated to protect individual privacy while advancing collective knowledge.
Unique species and cultivars tracked
Unique plant genera in database
Unique plant instances registered
Plants actively tracked by users
The Plant Index aggregates real-world cultivation data to provide species-level insights that help growers make informed decisions.
Average time from emergence to hardening, leaf production rates, and seasonal growth cycles
Optimal ranges for light, temperature, humidity, and feeding based on successful outcomes
Success rates by method (cuttings, corms, seeds), timing, and environmental conditions
PlantOS Rarity Score based on cultivation prevalence and community demand
Flowering frequency, timing, pollen viability, and cross success rates
30, 60, and 90-day survival after import or propagation under various conditions
As PlantOS users log grow events, measurements, and observations, this page will expand with detailed species-level statistics, care patterns, and propagation success rates.
Every log you create contributes to the collective knowledge base.
All data displayed in the Plant Index is aggregated and anonymized. Individual growers, locations, and identifying details are never exposed.
Statistics only appear when there are enough data points to prevent reverse identification. Small sample sizes are clearly marked with uncertainty indicators.
Location data is generalized to broad regions (e.g., "Northern Europe", "Southeast Asia") to protect privacy while maintaining climate relevance.
AI-identified patterns are reviewed by humans before being published to ensure accuracy and prevent misleading conclusions.
Your plants are famous. You remain private.
You don't need to do anything special. Simply use PlantOS as intended:
Add plants to your collection with species information
Record watering, feeding, observations, and measurements
Connect sensors or manually log temperature, humidity, and light levels
Note successes, failures, propagation results, and flowering events
The structure of your logs is what makes them valuable for research. You're already doing the work—PlantOS just makes it count.