Palm

Queen Palm

Syagrus romanzoffiana · Arecaceae

Also called: Cocos palm, Cocos plumosa

Queen Palm (Syagrus romanzoffiana) is a moderate-water palm well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun, with a fast growth rate. Expect creamy yellow blooms late spring to summer.

Queen Palm (Syagrus romanzoffiana) growing in Tucson
Photo: Bageense (CC BY-SA 4.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Queen Palm at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun; tolerates light shade. Performs marginally in Tucson and is stressed by intense low-desert heat and reflected sun.
Mature size
25-40 ft tall, 15-25 ft canopy spread; single trunk to about 12 in diameter
Growth rate
Fast
Bloom
Creamy yellow, Late spring to summer; creamy cascading flower plumes followed by orange date-like fruit
Cold hardiness
USDA 9b-11; hardy to about 25-28F. Foliage damaged by hard Tucson frosts; protect young palms on cold nights.
Soil
Prefers well-drained, slightly acidic, fertile soil; struggles in alkaline, caliche-laden Tucson soils which trigger chronic micronutrient deficiencies.
Native range
Southern Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay (South America)
Best used as
Specimen/accent palm, Tropical-look landscapes, Pool-side planting
Wildlife
Flowers attract bees; fruit eaten by birds and wildlife.
Toxicity
Non-toxic to pets and people; fruit is messy but not poisonous.

How to grow Queen Palm in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Water deeply and infrequently to a depth of 3 ft; roughly weekly in summer, monthly or less in winter. Keep moisture consistent as it is not truly drought-adapted and declines in dry, alkaline desert soil.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Heavy feeder; apply a specialized palm fertilizer with micronutrients 2-3 times during the warm season (spring through early fall). Highly prone to manganese deficiency ('frizzle top') and magnesium/iron deficiency in Tucson's alkaline soils.

Pruning & care

Remove only fully brown, dead fronds; never overprune or 'hurricane cut.' Do not remove green or yellowing fronds, which the palm recycles for nutrients. Remove old flower/fruit stalks to reduce litter.

Notes

A popular but problematic choice for Tucson. It is not well adapted to the low desert: alkaline soil, intense sun, and dry air cause frequent manganese, magnesium, and iron deficiencies, sunburned fronds, and a short, declining lifespan. Often overplanted; UA Extension and AMWUA generally steer homeowners toward better-adapted desert palms. Needs more water and feeding than most desert species. Not on the AMWUA low-water plant list.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; AMWUA Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert; Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum

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