Wildflower/Perennial · Sonoran native

Desert Zinnia

Zinnia acerosa · Asteraceae

Also called: White Desert Zinnia, Wild Zinnia, Spinyleaf Zinnia, Zinnia blanca (Spanish)

Native

Desert Zinnia (Zinnia acerosa) is a very low-water wildflower/perennial native to the Sonoran Desert region well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 4-10 in H x 8-12 in W (low mounding subshrub) in full sun.

Desert Zinnia (Zinnia acerosa) growing in Tucson
Photo: Stan Shebs (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Desert Zinnia at a glance

Water use
Very Low (established)
Sun
Full sun; thrives in hot, exposed sites with reflected heat.
Mature size
4-10 in H x 8-12 in W (low mounding subshrub)
Growth rate
Slow to moderate.
Bloom
Small papery white to cream ray flowers (4-6 petals) surrounding a yellow center., Spring through fall (April-October), blooming with warm-season rains, especially after summer monsoon. Long bloom season with available moisture.
Cold hardiness
Cold hardy to about 0-10 F (USDA zones 7-10); hardy throughout Tucson.
Soil
Well-drained, dry, rocky or sandy/gravelly desert soils; tolerates poor, alkaline, and calcareous soils. Requires excellent drainage.
Native range
Native to the Sonoran and Chihuahuan Deserts of the southwestern U.S. (Arizona, New Mexico, Texas) and northern Mexico.
Best used as
Groundcover, Small-scale rock/desert garden, Foreground/border edging, Mass planting, Pollinator garden, Low-water xeriscape, Median and parking-lot plantings
Wildlife
Nectar source for native bees, butterflies, and other small pollinators. Deer- and rabbit-resistant.
Toxicity
Non-toxic; no toxicity reported to people or animals.

How to grow Desert Zinnia in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Extremely drought tolerant; survives on rainfall once established. Occasional deep irrigation (every 2-3 weeks) in the hottest, driest part of summer extends bloom, but avoid overwatering, which causes rot.

Fertilizer & nutrients

No fertilizer needed; adapted to lean desert soils. Fertilizing is unnecessary and can cause weak, leggy growth.

Pruning & care

Little pruning required; lightly shear in late winter or early spring to remove old growth and maintain a compact, dense mound.

Notes

Tough, compact native mounding perennial/subshrub well suited to low-water Tucson landscapes. Forms a tidy gray-green low mound that whitens with bloom. Excellent for hot, dry, reflected-heat sites where little else thrives; pairs well with other low-desert wildflowers and accents.

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

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