Annual

Globe Amaranth

Gomphrena globosa · Amaranthaceae

Also called: Gomphrena, Bachelor's Button (regional)

Globe Amaranth (Gomphrena globosa) is a low-water annual well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 1-2 ft tall, 1 ft wide (dwarf types ~6-10 in) in full sun, with a moderate growth rate.

Globe Amaranth (Gomphrena globosa) growing in Tucson
Photo: Photo by David J. Stang (CC BY-SA 4.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Globe Amaranth at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun; thrives in heat and tolerates Tucson's intense summer sun.
Mature size
1-2 ft tall, 1 ft wide (dwarf types ~6-10 in)
Growth rate
Moderate
Bloom
Magenta/purple, pink, white, red, orange, lavender (papery clover-like globes), Late spring through fall (one of the best annuals for sustained summer bloom in the low desert, including through monsoon heat).
Cold hardiness
Frost-sensitive (USDA 9a-9b); a tender warm-season annual killed by frost. Loves heat.
Soil
Well-drained soil of average to poor fertility; tolerates alkaline desert soils. Good drainage is the main requirement.
Native range
Central America / Brazil and Panama (tropical Americas)
Best used as
Heat-tolerant summer color beds, Borders and edging, Cut flowers, Excellent dried/everlasting flowers (long-lasting papery blooms), Pollinator gardens
Wildlife
Attracts butterflies and bees; a reliable nectar source through summer heat.
Toxicity
Non-toxic / no significant toxicity reported for humans or pets.

How to grow Globe Amaranth in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Water 2-3 times weekly to establish, then about once weekly; quite heat- and drought-tolerant once established and dislikes soggy soil. Warm-season annual in Tucson: plant transplants after frost danger passes (Mar-Apr) once soil warms; it loves and bloom strongly through the hottest months and monsoon.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Light feeder. A balanced slow-release fertilizer at planting plus an occasional light liquid feed is plenty; avoid excess nitrogen which reduces flowering.

Pruning & care

Pinch young plants to encourage branching; deadheading is optional since flowers hold color a long time. Shear lightly mid-season if leggy.

Notes

One of the toughest summer-blooming annuals for Tucson, thriving when many flowers fade in the heat. The clover-like blooms dry beautifully for everlasting arrangements. Reseeds modestly.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension (Pima County Master Gardeners); AMWUA / Arizona low-desert planting guides; Missouri Botanical Garden Plant Finder

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