The Scottish botanist
George Forrest was the first westerner to collect
Pilea peperomioides, in 1906 and again in 1910, in the
Cang Mountain range in
Yunnan Province. In 1945, the species was found by Norwegian missionary Agnar Espegren in Yunnan Province when he was fleeing from Hunan Province. He took
cuttings of
P. peperomioides back to
Norway, by way of
India in 1946, and from there it was spread throughout
Scandinavia.
Pilea peperomioides is an example of a plant that has been spread amongst amateur gardeners via cuttings, without being well known to western botanists until the late 20th century. This led to the plant earning the nickname of “friendship plant”, or “pass-along plant”. Many horticulturists and hobbyists were not aware of its true classification, in the
nettle family
Urticaceae, until the 1980s. The first known published image of it appeared in the
Kew magazine in 1984. Through the early 2010s and 2020s,
P. peperomioides became widely available commercially, and is no longer a curiosity. The initial offerings for sale on the mainstream plant market saw great demand for the plant, with prices going as high as US$75 for a single unrooted cutting, advertised on
Instagram, as late as 2019. ==Description==