Houseplant

Rubber Plant

Ficus elastica · Moraceae

Also called: Rubber Tree, Rubber Fig, India Rubber Plant

Rubber Plant (Ficus elastica) is a low-water houseplant well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It's a moderate-growing houseplant.

Rubber Plant (Ficus elastica) growing in Tucson
Photo: B.navez (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Rubber Plant at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Bright indirect light indoors; tolerates a few hours of direct morning sun. In Tucson keep off unshaded south/west windows where summer sun through glass can scorch leaves; an east window or filtered south light is ideal.
Mature size
Indoors typically 6-10 ft tall and 2-4 ft wide; much larger (50+ ft) in tropical habitat but restrained in a pot.
Growth rate
Moderate
Bloom
Insignificant; does not reliably flower or fruit indoors, N/A indoors
Cold hardiness
Frost sensitive; keep indoors above ~55F, ideally 60-75F. Not cold hardy outdoors in Tucson winters (USDA 9a-9b frosts).
Soil
Well-draining peat- or coir-based houseplant potting mix; add perlite for aeration. Not planted in native desert soil.
Native range
Northeast India, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar and into southern China and Indonesia (tropical Asia)
Best used as
Indoor specimen/foliage plant, Air purification accent, Office/interior decor
Wildlife
None relevant; grown indoors.
Toxicity
Toxic to dogs, cats and humans if chewed; milky latex sap causes mouth/GI irritation and skin/eye irritation on contact. Keep away from pets and children.

How to grow Rubber Plant in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Grown indoors in Tucson. Water thoroughly when the top 1-2 inches of soil dry out, roughly every 7-10 days in summer and every 2-3 weeks in winter. Tucson's hard, salty tap water builds up over time, so leach the pot periodically; let it dry more between waterings in cool months to avoid root rot and leaf drop.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Feed with a balanced, dilute liquid houseplant fertilizer (e.g., 20-20-20 at half strength) monthly during spring-summer growth; stop in fall and winter. Iron/micronutrient chlorosis can show with Tucson's alkaline water, so an occasional micronutrient or chelated-iron supplement helps.

Pruning & care

Prune in spring/summer to control height and encourage branching; pinch the growing tip to make it bushier. Wear gloves and protect surfaces, as cut stems ooze irritating milky latex.

Notes

Grown strictly as an indoor houseplant in Tucson; the low desert's intense sun, low humidity and winter frost make it unsuitable for outdoor landscape use. Wipe dust from the large glossy leaves and watch for spider mites/scale, which thrive in Tucson's dry indoor air. Boost humidity with grouping or a pebble tray.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension (indoor/houseplant guidance); ASPCA Toxic and Non-Toxic Plant List; Missouri Botanical Garden Plant Finder

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