Shrub · Sonoran native

Desert Globemallow

Sphaeralcea ambigua · Malvaceae

Also called: Apricot Mallow, Desert Mallow, Apricot Globemallow

Native

Desert Globemallow (Sphaeralcea ambigua) is a very low-water shrub native to the Sonoran Desert region well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 24-40 in H x 24-36 in W (up to ~3 ft) in full sun, with a fast growth rate.

Desert Globemallow (Sphaeralcea ambigua) growing in Tucson
Photo: Kevin Gepford (CC BY-SA 4.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Desert Globemallow at a glance

Water use
Very Low (established)
Sun
Full sun; tolerates reflected heat.
Mature size
24-40 in H x 24-36 in W (up to ~3 ft)
Growth rate
Fast
Bloom
Apricot to orange-red (most common in Arizona); variable forms can be pink, lavender, or white., Primarily spring (March-May), with intermittent rebloom through the year, especially after rains.
Cold hardiness
Hardy to about 0-10 F (USDA zones 7-10); a tough, cold-tolerant desert perennial.
Soil
Thrives in poor, rocky, sandy or clay alkaline desert soils; demands sharp drainage and resents wet feet.
Native range
Native to the Sonoran and Mojave Deserts of Arizona, southern California, southern Nevada, southwestern Utah, and Sonora and Baja California, Mexico. The most drought-tolerant Sphaeralcea.
Best used as
Wildflower and pollinator plantings, Color accent, Mass planting / groundcover-scale drifts, Revegetation and naturalized desert gardens, Slope stabilization
Wildlife
Important nectar and pollen source for native bees (including specialist globemallow bees), butterflies, and other pollinators; a larval host for some butterflies. Foliage browsed by desert wildlife.
Toxicity
Not considered toxic; historically used by Indigenous peoples. Fine leaf and stem hairs can irritate skin and eyes in sensitive individuals.

How to grow Desert Globemallow in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Extremely drought tolerant once established; survives on rainfall in Tucson, with occasional deep summer irrigation (every 3-4 weeks) to extend bloom and freshness. Avoid frequent watering.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Needs no fertilizer; lean native soil is ideal. Rich or fertilized soil produces weak, floppy growth.

Pruning & care

Cut back hard (by roughly half to two-thirds) after the main spring bloom to refresh the plant, remove leggy stems, and encourage rebloom and a tidy mound. Shear spent flower stalks as needed.

Notes

Gray-green felty leaves on woody-based stems; short-lived perennial that reseeds readily. Tends to look ragged in summer heat and benefits greatly from a hard post-bloom cutback. A signature low-water wildflower for Tucson landscapes.

Sources: Arizona Native Plant Society (Plant Profile: Globemallow); Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center (Sphaeralcea ambigua); Southwest Desert Flora; ASU (M. Martin) Desert Landscape Plants database

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