Fruit Tree

Pomegranate 'Wonderful'

Punica granatum 'Wonderful' · Lythraceae

Also called: Wonderful Pomegranate, Granada (Spanish)

Pomegranate 'Wonderful' (Punica granatum 'Wonderful') is a low-water fruit tree well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun to light shade. Expect showy orange-red blooms Large orange-red flowers late spring into summer.

Pomegranate 'Wonderful' (Punica granatum 'Wonderful') growing in Tucson
Photo: Augustus Binu : flickr (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Pomegranate 'Wonderful' at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun to light shade; full sun gives the best flowering and fruit. Thrives in Tucson's intense heat.
Mature size
12-20 ft tall and 10-15 ft wide as a large shrub/small tree; commonly kept smaller.
Growth rate
Moderate to fast.
Bloom
Showy orange-red, Large orange-red flowers late spring into summer (May-July); large purplish-red fruit ripens September into fall. Foliage turns bright yellow in late fall before dropping.
Cold hardiness
Very cold-hardy for a desert fruit, tolerant to roughly 10-12°F; deciduous and fully hardy in Tucson (USDA 9a-9b).
Soil
Very adaptable; grows well in Tucson's alkaline, even somewhat heavy or saline desert soils. Needs reasonable drainage but is among the most soil-tolerant fruit plants.
Native range
Native to Iran to northern India/Central Asia; ancient cultivation in the Mediterranean and brought to the Southwest by Spanish missionaries. Not native to the Sonoran Desert.
Best used as
Fresh fruit and juice, Ornamental flowering shrub/small tree, Informal hedge or screen, Fall color accent, Edible/xeriscape landscaping
Wildlife
Tubular red flowers attract hummingbirds and bees; fruit eaten by birds.
Toxicity
Fruit (arils) edible and non-toxic. Root, stem and peel contain alkaloids that can be toxic in quantity; bark/roots considered mildly toxic to pets if chewed. Generally a safe landscape plant around children.

How to grow Pomegranate 'Wonderful' in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Drought-tolerant once established, but deep, regular watering (similar to citrus) produces far better, larger fruit and reduces fruit splitting: roughly every 7-10 days in summer, monthly or less in winter dormancy. Inconsistent moisture during ripening causes splitting.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Light feeder. A modest application of balanced or nitrogen fertilizer in late winter/early spring; avoid excess nitrogen, which promotes leaves over fruit. Compost and mulch are usually enough in established plantings.

Pruning & care

Prune in winter while dormant to shape; can be grown as a multi-trunk shrub or trained to a small single/multi-trunk tree. Remove the abundant basal suckers regularly to maintain a tree form. Fruit forms on spurs of mature wood, so avoid heavy shearing.

Notes

'Wonderful' is the leading commercial cultivar and an excellent, reliable producer in the low desert; large tangy purplish-red fruit with relatively soft seeds. One of the best low-water edible plants for Tucson. Plant fall or early spring.

Sources: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum - Pomegranate (Punica granatum) plant care sheet; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension / Pima County Master Gardeners; AMWUA Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert

← Back to the full Tucson Plant & Garden Library