Cactus · Sonoran native

Arizona Queen of the Night

Peniocereus striatus · Cactaceae

Also called: Dahlia-rooted Cereus, Gearstem Cactus, Sacamatraca, Night-blooming Cereus

Native

Arizona Queen of the Night (Peniocereus striatus) is a very low-water cactus native to the Sonoran Desert region well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It's a slow-growing cactus.

Arizona Queen of the Night (Peniocereus striatus) growing in Tucson
Photo: Kirkastroth, no known copyright restrictions (public domain) (PD) · iNaturalist

Arizona Queen of the Night at a glance

Water use
Very Low (established)
Sun
Full sun to partial/filtered shade; in habitat almost always grows up through a nurse shrub or tree such as creosote, bursage, or palo verde.
Mature size
Stems 2-4 ft H (occasionally to 6 ft); sprawling clump 2-3 ft W. Wiry, pencil-thin, 4-6 ribbed gray-green stems arising from a large tuberous root.
Growth rate
Slow
Bloom
White to pinkish-white, fragrant nocturnal funnel-shaped flowers 2-3 in across (smaller than P. greggii), Late spring to early summer (May-July), opening for a single night
Cold hardiness
Hardy to about 25 F; USDA zones 9-11. Tolerates light frost when dry; protect or site under canopy in colder Tucson microclimates.
Soil
Sharply drained rocky, gravelly, or sandy desert soils; intolerant of heavy, poorly drained clay. Prefers a coarse mineral mix.
Native range
Sonoran Desert of southern Arizona (Pima, Santa Cruz counties), Sonora, Sinaloa, and Baja California, Mexico
Best used as
Specimen/collector cactus, Naturalistic and native desert gardens, Nurse-plant understory plantings, Nighttime/moon garden interest
Wildlife
Night-blooming flowers are pollinated by sphinx (hawk) moths; small red fruits eaten by birds and small mammals. Stems are cryptic and easily overlooked among shrubs.
Toxicity
Not considered toxic to humans or pets; spines are minor. The tuberous root has been used in traditional medicine.

How to grow Arizona Queen of the Night in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Once established, needs essentially no supplemental irrigation in Tucson; rely on summer monsoon rain. Water only deeply during prolonged drought (every 3-4 weeks in extreme heat); keep dry in winter to prevent rot.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Not needed and generally not recommended; the plant is adapted to nutrient-poor desert soils. A very light, dilute cactus feed in spring is the most that should ever be applied.

Pruning & care

None required. Remove only dead or damaged stems with clean cuts; the wiry stems are sparse and benefit from the support of a nurse plant rather than pruning.

Notes

A cryptic, rarely seen native often mistaken for the larger-flowered Peniocereus greggii (Reina-de-la-noche). Best appreciated as a curiosity for its single spectacular night of bloom. Stems blend into surrounding shrubs by day. Grows from a large dahlia-like tuberous root that stores water.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum; Tohono Chul (Tucson) Queen of the Night references; SEINet / Arizona Flora

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