Tree · Sonoran native

Catclaw Acacia

Senegalia greggii · Fabaceae

Also called: Catclaw, Gregg Catclaw, Wait-a-minute Bush, Devil's Claw Acacia, Una de Gato

Native

Catclaw Acacia (Senegalia greggii) is a very low-water tree native to the Sonoran Desert region well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun.

Catclaw Acacia (Senegalia greggii) growing in Tucson
Photo: Stan Shebs (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Catclaw Acacia at a glance

Water use
Very Low (established)
Sun
Full sun.
Mature size
10-20 ft H x 10-20 ft W (often a large multi-trunked shrub; can reach ~25-30 ft as a tree on deep soils).
Growth rate
Slow.
Bloom
Pale creamy-yellow, fragrant catkin-like (cylindrical) flower spikes., Late spring into summer (April-June, sometimes again after summer rains).
Cold hardiness
Very cold hardy for a desert legume; USDA zones 7-10, tolerating roughly 0-10 F. Winter deciduous.
Soil
Well-drained native desert soils—rocky, sandy, decomposed-granite, and caliche/alkaline soils all suitable; excellent for unimproved sites.
Native range
Native to the Sonoran, Chihuahuan, and Mojave Deserts—throughout most of Arizona (along washes, slopes, and bajadas), plus CA, NV, NM, TX, UT, and northern Mexico.
Best used as
Native/wildlife habitat tree or large shrub, Naturalistic and revegetation plantings, Barrier or security hedge (thorns), Light filtered shade, Honey/bee plant
Wildlife
Outstanding pollinator and wildlife plant—a major nectar source for native bees and butterflies (larval host for several butterflies), and seeds/pods are eaten by birds, quail, and small mammals; dense thorny canopy provides cover and nesting.
Toxicity
Not significantly toxic to humans; the recurved thorns are the main hazard and can cause scratches and snagging injuries.

How to grow Catclaw Acacia in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Extremely drought tolerant once established (deep taproot); needs little to no supplemental water—occasional deep soaks in the hottest months speed growth, but established plants thrive on rainfall alone in Tucson.

Fertilizer & nutrients

None needed; as a nitrogen-fixing legume it makes its own nitrogen and grows in poor desert soils. Fertilizer is unnecessary and can cause weak, lanky growth.

Pruning & care

Prune in late winter/early spring to lift and shape into a small tree or to remove deadwood; minimal pruning otherwise. Wear heavy gloves and long sleeves—the recurved 'catclaw' thorns grab clothing and skin.

Notes

Reclassified from Acacia greggii to Senegalia greggii. A tough, low-water native for naturalistic and wildlife landscapes; the hooked thorns make placement away from walkways important. Slow growth and deciduous winter habit are trade-offs for its extreme toughness.

Sources: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; AMWUA Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert; Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center; Southwest Desert Flora

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