Tree

Texas Ebony

Ebenopsis ebano · Fabaceae

Also called: Ebano, Texas Ebony

Texas Ebony (Ebenopsis ebano) is a low-water tree well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 15-30 ft H x 15-25 ft W in full sun, with a slow growth rate.

Texas Ebony (Ebenopsis ebano) growing in Tucson
Photo: wlcutler (CC BY 2.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Texas Ebony at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun
Mature size
15-30 ft H x 15-25 ft W
Growth rate
Slow
Bloom
Creamy white to pale yellow, fragrant, Late spring through summer (June-August), often following rains
Cold hardiness
Hardy to about 15 F (brief lows near 12 F on established trees); USDA zones 9-11
Soil
Well-drained soils; tolerant of alkaline and rocky desert soils and some salinity.
Native range
South Texas and northeastern Mexico (Tamaulipan thornscrub); not native to the Sonoran Desert
Best used as
Specimen/shade tree, Evergreen screen, Patio tree, Wildlife/barrier planting
Wildlife
Flowers attract bees and butterflies; seeds within the thick woody pods are eaten by wildlife and historically by people (roasted). Dense thorny canopy gives excellent bird nesting cover.
Toxicity
Foliage/seeds not notably toxic; plant is armed with sharp paired spines that pose a physical hazard near walkways.

How to grow Texas Ebony in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Drought tolerant once established; deep watering every 2-4 weeks in summer speeds growth, but the tree survives on much less. Reduce watering in winter.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Minimal needs as a nitrogen-fixing legume; little to no fertilizer required. Light spring feeding optional to push faster growth on young trees.

Pruning & care

Prune in late spring after frost danger to lift the canopy and remove crossing/low branches; has zigzag twigs with paired spines, so structure early. Avoid heavy pruning in cold months.

Notes

Dense, dark-green, evergreen (to semi-evergreen) canopy with thick woody seedpods and zigzag spiny branchlets. Very slow-growing but long-lived and durable, casting deep shade. Cold-hardiness is marginal for the coldest Tucson microclimates—site in a warm location. Drops large persistent pods.

Sources: AMWUA 'Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert'; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum; Texas A&M / Aggie Horticulture references

← Back to the full Tucson Plant & Garden Library