Tree · Sonoran native

Sweet Acacia

Vachellia farnesiana · Fabaceae

Also called: Sweet Acacia, Huisache, Needle Bush, Perfume Acacia, Acacia farnesiana (syn.)

Native

Sweet Acacia (Vachellia farnesiana) is a low-water tree native to the Sonoran Desert region well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 15-25 ft H x 15-25 ft W in full sun, with a moderate to fast growth rate.

Sweet Acacia (Vachellia farnesiana) growing in Tucson
Photo: Forest & Kim Starr (CC BY 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Sweet Acacia at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Full sun
Mature size
15-25 ft H x 15-25 ft W
Growth rate
Moderate to fast
Bloom
Golden yellow (fragrant, round puffball flower heads), Late winter through spring (Feb-April), sometimes with sporadic later bloom
Cold hardiness
Hardy to about 15-18 F; USDA zones 9-11. May show frost tip damage in cold Tucson winters but recovers; semi-evergreen to briefly deciduous.
Soil
Well-drained soils; tolerates poor, rocky, sandy, and alkaline desert soils. Needs good drainage.
Native range
Native to the southwestern U.S. including southern Arizona (e.g., Pima/Santa Cruz counties) and widely through the American tropics/subtropics and Mexico; pantropical in distribution. Native to the Sonoran Desert region, though uncommon in the wild in Arizona.
Best used as
Fragrant flowering accent and small shade tree, Patio, courtyard, and streetscape tree (site away from high-traffic areas due to thorns), Wildlife/pollinator and native habitat plantings
Wildlife
Highly fragrant flowers are an important early-season nectar/pollen source for bees and butterflies; host plant value for native insects; pods/seeds eaten by birds and mammals; thorny canopy provides protected bird nesting and cover.
Toxicity
Not significantly toxic to humans; flowers have been used in perfumery (source of 'cassie' essential oil). Sharp paired thorns are the main hazard. Foliage is browsed by livestock and generally not considered poisonous.

How to grow Sweet Acacia in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Drought tolerant once established; deep irrigation every 2-4 weeks in summer keeps it attractive, with little water needed in cooler months. Tolerates more water but supplemental deep watering during establishment is important.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Generally not needed; nitrogen-fixing legume thrives in lean soils. A light spring feeding can support young trees if desired, but mature trees rarely require it.

Pruning & care

Train to single or multi-trunk form when young; prune in late spring/summer to lift and shape the canopy and remove low, twiggy, or crossing branches. Be cautious of the sharp paired thorns. Avoid heavy pruning that stimulates weak watersprouts.

Notes

Formerly Acacia farnesiana; Vachellia farnesiana is the currently accepted name after the Acacia genus split. Valued for intensely fragrant golden late-winter/early-spring flowers that signal the end of winter in Tucson. Armed with sharp thorns, so place thoughtfully. Litter from flowers and pods occurs. Drought- and heat-tough; one of the showier small native desert legume trees.

Sources: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum; AMWUA "Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert"; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; SouthwestDesertFlora.com; Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center

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