Shrub

Glossy Privet

Ligustrum japonicum · Oleaceae

Also called: Japanese Privet, Wax-leaf Privet, Texas Privet

Glossy Privet (Ligustrum japonicum) is a moderate-water shrub well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun to partial shade, with a moderate to fast growth rate.

Glossy Privet (Ligustrum japonicum) growing in Tucson
Photo: José Luis Gálvez (CC BY-SA 2.5) · Wikimedia Commons

Glossy Privet at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun to partial shade; in the low desert, afternoon shade or filtered light reduces leaf scorch. Tolerates more sun than many broadleaf evergreens with adequate water.
Mature size
8-12 ft tall and 6-10 ft wide (kept smaller and dense as a hedge)
Growth rate
Moderate to fast
Bloom
Creamy white, fragrant (strongly scented) flower panicles, Late spring to early summer, followed by blue-black berries
Cold hardiness
Cold-hardy to about 5-10°F (USDA 7-10); evergreen in Tucson and tolerant of normal winter freezes with little damage.
Soil
Adaptable; tolerates a range of soils including alkaline desert soil, though it benefits from organic amendment and good drainage. Avoid constantly wet sites.
Native range
Native to Japan and Korea.
Best used as
Formal sheared hedge or screen, Topiary, Privacy planting, Small multi-trunk patio tree, Foundation shrub
Wildlife
Fragrant flowers attract bees and pollinators; berries are eaten by birds, which spread seeds (can become weedy/invasive in some regions).
Toxicity
Berries and leaves are toxic if ingested, causing GI upset (vomiting, diarrhea) in pets, children, and livestock. Flag as a caution plant; pollen and fragrance can also trigger allergies.

How to grow Glossy Privet in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Provide regular deep irrigation; about every 5-7 days in summer and every 14 days in winter, watering to 1.5-2 ft depth. Established plants are moderately tolerant of some drought but look best with steady moisture; mulch to conserve water.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Feed with a balanced shrub fertilizer in spring and early summer. Apply chelated iron and soil sulfur as needed to prevent iron chlorosis common in Tucson's alkaline soils.

Pruning & care

Tolerates heavy shearing and is widely used as a clipped hedge or topiary; shear as needed during the growing season and shape in late winter. Can be limbed up into a small multi-trunk tree.

Notes

A durable, heat-tolerant hedge shrub for Tucson; more forgiving than sweet viburnum. Watch for iron chlorosis and occasional sooty mold/scale. Heavy spring bloom is strongly fragrant and can bother allergy sufferers. Bird-dispersed seedlings can volunteer. Plant in fall or spring. Sometimes confused with Ligustrum lucidum (a larger tree-form privet).

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; Pima County Master Gardeners; AMWUA / regional horticulture references

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