Shrub

Yellow bird of paradise

Erythrostemon gilliesii · Fabaceae

Also called: Desert bird of paradise, Bird of paradise bush, Yellow poinciana

Yellow bird of paradise (Erythrostemon gilliesii) is a low-water shrub well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 6-10 ft H x 6-10 ft W in full sun, with a fast growth rate.

Yellow bird of paradise (Erythrostemon gilliesii) growing in Tucson
Photo: Alvesgaspar (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Yellow bird of paradise at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun; tolerates reflected heat.
Mature size
6-10 ft H x 6-10 ft W
Growth rate
Fast
Bloom
Bright yellow petals with long, showy bright-red stamens., Late spring through summer (May-September), peaking in the heat.
Cold hardiness
Hardy to about 10-15 F (USDA zones 8-11); root-hardy and recovers from frost dieback.
Soil
Tolerant of most well-drained soils, including poor, rocky, and alkaline desert soils; needs good drainage.
Native range
Native to Argentina and Uruguay (South America); widely naturalized in the southwestern U.S.
Best used as
Accent or specimen shrub, Informal screen or hedge, Color in hot, dry beds, Desert and xeriscape gardens
Wildlife
Flowers attract hummingbirds, butterflies, and bees.
Toxicity
Green seed pods and seeds are toxic if ingested, causing severe gastrointestinal irritation; keep away from children and pets.

How to grow Yellow bird of paradise in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Deeply water established plants every 2-3 weeks in summer and monthly or less in winter; tolerates drought but blooms and stays denser with occasional deep irrigation.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Generally needs no fertilizer in desert soils; as a legume it fixes its own nitrogen. Excess nitrogen reduces flowering.

Pruning & care

Prune in late winter to shape and remove frost-damaged or leggy wood; can be cut back hard to renew an overgrown plant. Avoid shearing into a formal ball.

Notes

Reclassified from Caesalpinia gilliesii to Erythrostemon gilliesii; older references list it under Caesalpinia. The most cold-hardy and drought-tolerant of the desert bird-of-paradise shrubs. Reseeds readily; deciduous to semi-deciduous with pungent foliage.

Sources: AMWUA Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert; Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; Tohono Chul / Tucson Botanical Gardens

← Back to the full Tucson Plant & Garden Library