Groundcover

Gazania

Gazania rigens · Asteraceae

Also called: Treasure Flower, Trailing Gazania

Gazania (Gazania rigens) is a low-water groundcover well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun, with a moderate to fast growth rate.

Gazania (Gazania rigens) growing in Tucson
Photo: Alvesgaspar (CC BY 2.5) · Wikimedia Commons

Gazania at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun; flowers open in sunlight and close on cloudy days and at night.
Mature size
6-10 in H x 12-24 in W (trailing forms spread wider)
Growth rate
Moderate to fast
Bloom
Yellow, orange, gold, bronze, cream, pink, and bicolors depending on variety, Peak spring and fall, with scattered bloom much of the year in mild weather
Cold hardiness
Hardy to about 20-25 F (USDA Zone 8b-9); can be damaged by hard frost but usually recovers or self-sows.
Soil
Well-drained soil; tolerant of poor, sandy, and alkaline soils. Drainage is essential to avoid crown rot.
Native range
Coastal southern Africa (South Africa, Mozambique)
Best used as
Massed color groundcover, Border and parkway plantings, Containers, Slope cover (trailing types)
Wildlife
Flowers attract bees and butterflies.
Toxicity
Generally regarded as non-toxic / low concern to people and pets.

How to grow Gazania in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Water every 5-7 days in summer heat to keep clumps full and blooming; every 10-14 days or less in cooler months. Drought tolerant once established but blooms best with regular irrigation; avoid keeping crowns constantly wet.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Light feeder; a spring application of balanced fertilizer or periodic light feeding during the growing season encourages bloom. Avoid heavy feeding.

Pruning & care

Shear off spent flowers and cut back leggy or tired plantings to rejuvenate; divide clumping types every few years. Remove frost-burned foliage in spring.

Notes

Two main forms: clumping (G. rigens) and trailing (var. leucolaena); trailing types make better groundcover. Short-lived in the low desert and often treated as a long-blooming perennial or replanted periodically; performs best as a cool-season-into-spring color plant and can struggle in mid-summer monsoon humidity. Reflected heat and poor drainage shorten its life.

Sources: AMWUA 'Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert'; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension (Pima County Master Gardeners); Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum

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