Accent

Elephant Food

Portulacaria afra · Didiereaceae (formerly Portulacaceae)

Also called: Dwarf Jade, Elephant Bush, Spekboom, Porkbush, Miniature Jade

Elephant Food (Portulacaria afra) is a low-water accent well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun to partial shade, with a moderate to fast growth rate.

Elephant Food (Portulacaria afra) growing in Tucson
Photo: Dinkum (CC0) · Wikimedia Commons

Elephant Food at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun to partial shade. In Tucson, light afternoon shade prevents leaf scorch in peak summer; full sun gives the most compact, reddish-edged growth.
Mature size
4-6 ft H x 4-6 ft W in the ground (can reach taller in ideal conditions); much smaller in containers
Growth rate
Moderate to fast
Bloom
Small star-shaped pink to lavender-pink flowers (flowering is infrequent in cultivation), Late spring to summer when it blooms; flowering is sporadic and uncommon on container/landscape plants in the low desert
Cold hardiness
Frost tender; leaf and stem damage near 30-32°F, serious dieback in the mid-20s. USDA zones 9b-11. In Tucson, best in a warm microclimate or grown in pots that can be sheltered from hard freezes.
Soil
Fast-draining sandy or gritty/cactus-mix soil. Tolerates poor soils; will rot in heavy, wet, or poorly drained ground.
Native range
Native to the Eastern Cape and arid thickets of South Africa and Mozambique. Not native to the Sonoran Desert.
Best used as
Accent/specimen, Container and patio plantings, Informal low hedge or screen (in frost-free spots), Bonsai, Succulent and rock gardens, Erosion control / soil stabilization, Edible/wildlife thicket (leaves are edible, tart)
Wildlife
Tortoises, and in its native range elephants and other browsers, eat the foliage; small flowers attract bees and other pollinators. Leaves are edible to humans (tart, citrusy) and to many pets in small amounts.
Toxicity
Generally regarded as non-toxic / pet-safe — listed as non-toxic and a known browse plant; the small succulent leaves are even edible. (Note: do not confuse with true Jade, Crassula ovata, which IS toxic to pets.)

How to grow Elephant Food in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Drought and heat tolerant once established. Water about every 1-2 weeks in summer, letting soil dry between waterings, and sparingly in winter. Overwatering causes soft, rotting stems.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Low needs. A dilute balanced or low-nitrogen fertilizer once or twice during the warm growing season promotes lush growth but is optional.

Pruning & care

Responds very well to pruning and pinching — easily shaped as an informal hedge, shrub, bonsai, or container specimen. Trim anytime in the warm season; cuttings root readily.

Notes

A soft-wooded succulent shrub with reddish-brown stems and small, round, glossy jade-green leaves; a variegated cultivar also exists. Frequently mistaken for true Jade (Crassula ovata) but is unrelated, faster-growing, and more heat-loving. Highly versatile, fast, and forgiving accent for Tucson — ideal in containers and warm microclimates given its frost sensitivity. Noted internationally as an exceptional carbon-sequestering plant.

Sources: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; AMWUA / low-desert succulent references; ASPCA Non-Toxic Plant List; Tohono Chul / Tucson Botanical Gardens

← Back to the full Tucson Plant & Garden Library