Accent

Candelilla

Euphorbia antisyphilitica · Euphorbiaceae

Also called: Wax Plant, Wax Euphorbia

Candelilla (Euphorbia antisyphilitica) is a very low-water accent well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 2-3 ft H x 2-3 ft W, with a slow growth rate.

Candelilla (Euphorbia antisyphilitica) growing in Tucson
Photo: Frank Vincentz (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Candelilla at a glance

Water use
Very Low (established)
Sun
Full sun to light/reflected heat; tolerates full reflected sun. Will accept light shade but grows leggier and less dense.
Mature size
2-3 ft H x 2-3 ft W
Growth rate
Slow
Bloom
Small white to pinkish flowers borne along the upper stems., Mostly spring and fall, sporadically after rains; flowering is subtle and not the main ornamental feature.
Cold hardiness
Hardy to about 10-15°F (USDA zones 8-11); root-hardy and recovers from occasional brief lows. Tip damage possible below ~20°F.
Soil
Requires excellent drainage; thrives in lean, rocky, sandy or decomposed-granite soils. Tolerates poor, alkaline native desert soils. Rots in heavy, poorly drained or overwatered soils.
Native range
Chihuahuan Desert of West Texas and northern Mexico (Coahuila, Chihuahua); not native to the Sonoran Desert but well adapted to Tucson's low desert.
Best used as
Accent / focal point, Container plantings, Rock and cactus gardens, Xeriscape and low-water designs, Mass groupings for vertical texture
Wildlife
Minor flower interest for bees and small pollinators; leafless stems offer little browse value, and the latex deters most herbivores.
Toxicity
Milky latex sap is toxic and a skin/eye irritant; contains caustic compounds historically used for candle and wax production. Keep away from eyes and mucous membranes; wear gloves when cutting. Toxic if ingested.

How to grow Candelilla in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Established plants need very little supplemental water — deep soak roughly once a month in summer, little to none in winter. Overwatering causes rot, so let soil dry thoroughly between irrigations.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Essentially none required; thrives on lean soils. A single light application of balanced or low-nitrogen fertilizer in spring is more than enough if any feeding is desired.

Pruning & care

Little to no pruning needed. Remove dead, frost-damaged, or errant stems in spring; avoid shearing, which spoils its natural clumping habit.

Notes

A nearly leafless succulent-stemmed accent forming dense clumps of slender, pencil-like, grey-green, wax-coated upright stems. The waxy coating is the source of commercial candelilla wax. Valued in Tucson landscapes for striking vertical line and architectural texture in cactus and succulent compositions; extremely heat- and drought-tolerant once established.

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

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