Tree

Tipu Tree

Tipuana tipu · Fabaceae

Also called: Tipa, Rosewood, Pride of Bolivia

Tipu Tree (Tipuana tipu) is a moderate-water tree well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun, with a fast growth rate.

Tipu Tree (Tipuana tipu) growing in Tucson
Photo: Bageense (CC BY-SA 4.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Tipu Tree at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun.
Mature size
25-40 ft tall and equally wide (umbrella-shaped canopy)
Growth rate
Fast
Bloom
Apricot-yellow to golden sweet-pea-shaped flowers, Late spring to summer (May-July)
Cold hardiness
Frost sensitive; hardy only to about 25°F. Below that, winter leaf drop occurs first, then branch and trunk dieback. Marginal in colder Tucson microclimates; protect young trees and site in warm, frost-protected spots.
Soil
Prefers deep, well-drained soil; tolerates a range of desert soils but does best with room for its large, aggressive root system.
Native range
Bolivia, northern Argentina, and southern Brazil (subtropical South America)
Best used as
Fast shade tree, Large lawn/park specimen, Patio shade (with caution)
Wildlife
Showy flowers attract bees and other pollinators; canopy provides bird habitat.
Toxicity
Not known to be significantly toxic to people or pets; low concern.

How to grow Tipu Tree in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Needs regular deep irrigation to establish and to look its best in the low desert; deep water every 7-14 days in summer heat, reducing to every 3-4 weeks in cooler months. More drought tolerant once established but performs poorly under severe drought.

Fertilizer & nutrients

As a legume it fixes some nitrogen; apply a light balanced or slow-release fertilizer in spring to support fast growth. Watch for iron chlorosis in alkaline soil and treat with chelated iron if needed.

Pruning & care

Requires structural pruning in the first years to correct narrow/co-dominant crotches and brittle limbs; thin the canopy in late winter to reduce wind/storm breakage. Stake young trees.

Notes

Popular fast-growing shade tree, but plant with caution: aggressive surface roots can lift sidewalks, patios, and pipes (keep well away from hardscape and foundations), wood is brittle and storm-prone, it drops winged seed pods and litter, and it is frost-tender. The tipu psyllid pest can also cause sticky honeydew. Plant in spring after frost danger passes.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; Arizona State University (Virtual Library of Phoenix Landscape Plants); UC Center for Invasive Species Research (tipu psyllid)

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