Wildflower/Perennial · Sonoran native

Tufted Evening Primrose

Oenothera caespitosa · Onagraceae

Also called: White Evening Primrose, Fragrant Evening Primrose, Gumbo Lily, Tufted Sundrops, Desert Evening Primrose

Native

Tufted Evening Primrose (Oenothera caespitosa) is a low-water wildflower/perennial native to the Sonoran Desert region well suited to Tucson and the low desert.

Tufted Evening Primrose (Oenothera caespitosa) growing in Tucson
Photo: Stan Shebs (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Tufted Evening Primrose at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun to light afternoon shade; needs sun for best bloom but appreciates some afternoon protection in the hottest sites.
Mature size
6-12 in H x 12-24 in W (low, stemless rosette spreading clump)
Growth rate
Slow to moderate.
Bloom
Large showy white flowers (3-4 in across) that open in the evening and fade to pink/rose by the next afternoon; fragrant., Spring (March-May), sometimes again after summer rains; flowers open at dusk and close the following day.
Cold hardiness
Cold hardy to about -20 to -30 F (USDA zones 4-9); fully hardy in Tucson.
Soil
Well-drained sandy, gravelly, or rocky soils; tolerates poor and alkaline desert soils. Excellent drainage is essential; rots in heavy wet soil.
Native range
Native to the western and southwestern U.S. including Arizona; occurs in the Sonoran Desert and adjacent higher-elevation areas.
Best used as
Foreground/border, Rock and desert gardens, Groundcover-scale accent, Pollinator/moth garden, Naturalized wildflower plantings, Low-water xeriscape
Wildlife
Large fragrant night-opening flowers are pollinated by hawkmoths (sphinx moths); also visited by native bees. Deer-resistant.
Toxicity
Non-toxic; no significant toxicity reported.

How to grow Tufted Evening Primrose in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Drought tolerant once established; water deeply and infrequently. Occasional irrigation (every 2-3 weeks) in spring and dry summer heat prolongs bloom, but avoid overwatering and standing water.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Minimal to no fertilizer; adapted to lean soils. A very light spring feeding is optional but generally unnecessary.

Pruning & care

Little pruning needed; remove spent flower stalks and tidy dead foliage. Cut back tattered growth in late winter to refresh the rosette.

Notes

Stemless, low rosette-forming native perennial prized for its large, fragrant, evening-opening white flowers that age to pink. Best in well-drained, gritty soils with restrained water; short-lived in overly irrigated beds. Distinct from the aggressive pink-flowered Mexican evening primrose (Oenothera berlandieri/speciosa) — this species is clumping and well-behaved.

Sources: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; AMWUA Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert; Tohono Chul; USDA PLANTS Database

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