Tree

African sumac

Searsia lancea · Anacardiaceae

Also called: Willow rhus, Karee, Karree

African sumac (Searsia lancea) is a low-water tree well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun, with a moderate to fast growth rate. Expect greenish-yellow (not ornamental) blooms Inconspicuous small yellowish-green flowers in late winter to spring.

African sumac (Searsia lancea) growing in Tucson
Photo: JMK at English Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

African sumac at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun; tolerates reflected heat.
Mature size
20-25 ft tall and 20-30 ft wide; rounded, weeping evergreen canopy with willow-like leaves.
Growth rate
Moderate to fast
Bloom
Greenish-yellow (not ornamental), Inconspicuous small yellowish-green flowers in late winter to spring; dioecious (separate male and female trees).
Cold hardiness
Evergreen and hardy to roughly 15-20 degrees F; reliably hardy in Tucson with little to no frost protection.
Soil
Tolerates a wide range of desert soils including alkaline, rocky, sandy, and caliche; needs reasonable drainage.
Native range
Native to southern Africa (South Africa, Lesotho, Botswana, Namibia). Synonym: Rhus lancea.
Best used as
Evergreen shade tree, Screen / windbreak, Patio and street tree, Erosion control
Wildlife
Provides dense evergreen cover and nesting habitat; small fruits on female trees are eaten by birds.
Toxicity
Generally low toxicity, but in the Anacardiaceae (cashew/poison ivy family) the sap can cause skin irritation or allergic dermatitis in sensitive individuals.

How to grow African sumac in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Drought tolerant once established; deep-water roughly every 2-3 weeks in summer and monthly to less in winter. Deep infrequent irrigation that wets the full root zone encourages deep roots and a more stable, drought-hardy tree.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Low requirements. An optional light application of a balanced or slow-release tree fertilizer in spring supports growth; usually not needed in established trees. Iron chelate corrects occasional chlorosis in alkaline soil.

Pruning & care

Train to a single or multi-trunk form when young and thin the canopy to reduce wind resistance and 'sail' effect. Prune in late winter/early spring; remove crossing and weak limbs to build strong structure.

Notes

Tough, fast evergreen shade tree for Tucson, but female trees produce abundant small berries that drop, stain hardscape, and reseed readily, creating volunteer seedlings; it is considered weedy/potentially invasive in the low desert. Choose male (fruitless) selections to avoid litter and seedlings. Shallow roots can lift pavement, and dense canopies should be thinned to reduce wind throw.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; Arizona Department of Water Resources / AMWUA low-water tree lists; Arid Zone Trees grower references; Pima County Master Gardeners

← Back to the full Tucson Plant & Garden Library