4 desert trees good for the soil and 4 toxic ones

acacia in bloom

Recently Tucson’s Mayor Romero announced a tree planting goal for the City: one million new trees planted in the next ten years to help combat climate change. (That works out to 274 trees a day!) Homeowners are encouraged to plant one or more trees around their homes. But the number of tree choices for hot dry gardens runs into the dozens. So how to choose?

Trees related to peas?

In the hot dry gardens of the Mojave and Sonoran deserts homeowners should consider the benefits of planting these 4 trees that belong to the pea family. Why pea family trees? Because they take in abundant nitrogen (NH2) from the air and convert it to ammonium nitrogen (NH4) which gets added to the soil via bacteria-filled nodules on the tree roots.

So, not only do these trees do what all good trees do–provide shade and remove carbon dioxide from the air–they also help other plants beneath and nearby to thrive by providing nitrogen to the soil for nutrition.

You see this everywhere in untouched, natural areas, like this photo from the Saguaro National park: cacti and other plants growing right under and up through trees.

Food for the soil and plants nearby

First on the Good-for-the-Soil List: Mesquite (Prosopis). Among the most common varieties of Mesquite are Argentine mesquite (P. alba), Chilean mesquite (P. chilensis), honey mesquite (P. glandulosa), the screwbean mesquite (P. pubescens ) and velvet mesquite (P. velutina). The honey and velvet mesquites produce edible seeds pods that are commonly ground up into a flour for cooking. The screwbean is quite a messy tree. In size, mesquites range from 8 to 10 foot tall shrubs to 40 foot tall trees.

Mesquite tree prosopis
Mesquite alba in Las Vegas

They are super-easy to grow. On my short walk this morning I noticed dozens of young volunteer mesquite trees sprouting along neglected areas next to the street. If they are left alone, within a few years they will become trees with no help from anyone.

Trivia: in Australia and Ethiopia mesquites were introduced a few decades ago and loved the weather and land so much that they are now regarded as invasive pest trees because they are aggressively taking over grazing lands.

palo verde tree at Sunnyland garden
“Palo Verde Tree, Sunnylands, CA 2-22-14” by inkknife_2000 (11.5 million views) is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

Second on the Good-for-the-Soil list: Palo Verde trees (Parkinsonia florida), the Official Arizona State Tree. In Spanish the name means “green stick” with good reason. It is immediately recognizable by the green color of its trunk and nearly leafless branches. In Spring it bursts into bloom with brilliant yellow flowers and small leaves emerge, only to fade away quickly. While it does not cast much shade, it too helps other plants thrive by fixing nitrogen in the earth. The Foothill Palo Verde, which has a more yellow tinge to the trunk, reaches 20 feet in height. The blue Palo Verde can grow to 40 feet tall.

Acacia in bloom at Los Angeles Arboretum

Third, we have the Acacia tree (Acacia), which some claim should be knick-named the “Allergy Tree”. These fast growing Southwest natives love the heat and bloom with yellow powder-puff flowers in the spring that leave a pretty carpet of yellow pollen and spent blooms beneath them. Some also bloom again in the Fall. The larger varieties will reach 40 feet in heights and provide excellent shade, but there is one smaller variety suitable for courtyards.

Food for the soil and people, too
“Carob tree” by tree-species is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Fourth, and a little harder to find, is the Carob tree (Ceratonia siliqua). Not only does this Mediterranean native tree add nitrogen in the soil, it has pods that, when ripe, can be ground up and used as a substitute for chocolate. Be sure to read instructions online if you plan to do this.

Growing to a height of 50 feet carob trees cast dark, cooling shade. Unlike the previous three on this list, it needs some water year ’round. It is, however, on the suggested tree list in Tucson. For whatever it is worth, it is one of my favorite trees and Carob ice cream was very popular among the hipsters in San Francisco in the 1960s.

4 Toxic beauties

But not all trees in the pea family are good. There are some toxic trees in the pea family which are quite beautiful and are planted in hot dry gardens throughout the Southwest–and probably shouldn’t be. While they can fix nitrogen in the soil they are best NOT planted in a family garden because of the dangers they can pose.

The Golden Medallion tree
Golden Medallion tree in Tucson

The striking Golden Chain tree (Laburnum × watereri) is uncommon, temperamental, and all parts are poisonous. The brilliant yellow flowers hang down like long chains of gold, which is where the name comes from.

The Golden Medallion tree (Cassia leptophylla) is similar in appearance to the Golden Chain tree. Its pods are poisonous.

The umbrella-shaped Mimosa tree (Albizia julibrissin) with its pretty pink-white flowers has poisonous seed pods and a reputation for being invasive.

The small Texas Mountain Laurel (Dermatophyllum secundiflorum) is a shrub-like tree with lovely purple blooms that look like wisteria or lilacs. Its brilliant red seed pods are deadly poisonous.

For more information about trees suitable for hot dry gardens, go to our Leafy Trees for Shade page.



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