20 Amazing Desert Plants and Where to Spot Them Around the World

These plants are among the most resilient in harsh climates.

Bottle tree - endemic of Socotra Island
Desert rose. zanskar / Getty Images

A third of the world's land surface is covered by desert. Some of the driest places on Earth are also home to some of the most intriguing plants in the world. As climate change induces a sixth great extinction in Earth's history, these desert survivors are models of resilience and adaptation. But even they have their limits.

1
of 20

Tree Tumbo (Welwitschia mirabilis)

Tree tumbo (Welwitschia mirabilis)

Mitchell Krog / Getty Images

The Namib desert is one of the driest places on Earth, the kind of place that would produce one of the most distinctive plants in the world, best known by its botanical name Welwitschia. It is the only species within the Welwitschia genus, so no other plant is like it.

With some individuals over 1,000 years old, Welwitschia produces only two leaves, which continue to grow along the ground throughout the lifetime of the slow-growing plant. In a land that produces less than 4 inches of rain per year, Welwitschia subsists not on a deep taproot but on rainwater and fog running down its long leaves to its roots.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Low-growing gymnosperm
  • Plant size: Up to 26 feet in circumference
  • Native area: Namib Desert, Namibia, Angola
2
of 20

Honey Mesquite (Prosopis chilensis)

Honey Mesquite plant Prosopis chilensis

Sergi Escribano / Getty Images

Mesquite (Prosopis spp.) is a familiar plant in many American deserts. Its long, deep roots allow it to reach groundwater in regions with little or no rainfall. In the Atacama Desert of Northern Chile, Prosopis chilensis, commonly known as honey mesquite, is a small, thorny shrub or tree that can provide shade and forage for animals as well as firewood for humans.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Shrub/tree
  • Plant size: Up to 46 feet tall, trunk 3 feet in diameter
  • Native area: Atacama Desert, Chile
3
of 20

Joshua Tree (Yucca brevifolia)

Joshua Tree (Yucca brevifolia)

Carlo Allegri / Getty Images

As its botanical name suggests, the Joshua tree is not a tree, but a large yucca. It is one of the most distinctive plants of the Mojave Desert. Growing roughly 3 inches per year in coarse sand and silt, it is under extreme pressure from climate change, especially from the threat of wildfires. The Dome Fire of August 2020 decimated an entire Joshua tree forest in the Mojave National Preserve.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Yucca
  • Plant size: Up to 36 feet tall
  • Native area: Mojave Desert, United States
4
of 20

Salt Cedar (Tamarix aphylla)

Salt Cedar (Tamarix aphylla)

Eddie Gerald / Getty Images

Known as the Salt Cedar or Athel Pine, Tamarix aphylla has been used for centuries for shade, burial rituals, and windbreaks. It is fire-resistant, regrowing from its root-crown after its above-ground growth has been burned. It can be used for agroforestry, providing shade to grazing animals, but it can be invasive in regions where it is not native.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Evergreen tree
  • Plant size: Up to 60 feet tall
  • Native area: Negev, Syrian, and Arabian deserts as well as arid regions of North Africa and Western and South Asia
5
of 20

Desert Willow (Chilopsis linearis)

Desert Willow (Chilopsis linearis)

Rolf Nussbaumer / Getty Images

Extending from northern Mexico to the southwestern United States, the Chihuahuan Desert is the largest desert in North America. It is known for its cacti, but many other plants have adapted to this harsh climate. Desert willows are a common sight, especially in washes and along streams, and are often cultivated for their purple to pink flowers.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Deciduous tree or shrub
  • Plant size: 4 to 24 feet tall
  • Native area: Chihuahuan and Sonoran Deserts, United States and Mexico
6
of 20

Saxaul (Haloxylon ammodendron)

Saxaul (Haloxylon ammodendron)

skif / Getty Images

The Saxaul tree will grow where little else will. It is the only tree native to the Gobi Desert in Mongolia. Its narrow leaves allow it to resist strong desert winds. Because of its ability to grow on sand dunes, it is an important plant for countering desertification, as its roots grow 15 feet down into the dunes and spread twice as wide. This not only stabilizes the dunes but creates a habitat for other desert plants.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Large shrub or small tree
  • Plant size: Up to 8 feet tall
  • Native area: Gobi Desert, Mongolia and other arid regions in Central Asia
7
of 20

Ghost Gum (Corymbia aparrerinja)

Ghost Gum (Corymbia aparrerinja)

Ken Griffiths / Getty Images

The “red center” of Australia is a series of salt pans and sandy plains, the driest part of the Australian Outback. It is the home of the Ghost gum, so-named because of its smooth, nearly white bark that seems to glow in the dark. Corymbia aparrerinja has a distinctive lignotuber, a swelling at the base of the tree used to store food and water and protect it from fire and drought.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Tree
  • Plant size: Up to 66 feet tall
  • Native area: Australian Outback
8
of 20

Rock Purslane (Calandrinia spectabilis)

Rock purslane (Calandrinia spectabilis)

Credit: Nnehring / Getty Images

A drought-tolerant succulent from the Atacama Desert, the driest desert in the world, rock purslane requires almost no rainfall once established. Excellent for xeriscaped gardens, especially those that receive a coastal fog, Calandrinia spectabilis has bluish-gray foliage that can absorb moisture from the air. Like other purslanes, it's a member of the portulaca family. The plant makes an excellent ground cover, as it can grow into a thick mound up to four feet wide. With flowers looking like magenta-colored poppies, it is also a pollinator-friendly plant.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Shrubby perennial succulent
  • Plant size: Up to 8 inches tall
  • Native area: Atacama Desert, Chile
9
of 20

Quiver Tree (Aloidendron dichotomum)

Quiver Tree (Aloidendron dichotomum)

Quiver Tree (Aloidendron dichotomum)

Quiver trees are giant aloes that play a vital role as anchor plants in the Namib Desert. They provide nectar to birds and baboons, and quivers for the arrows of the San peoples of southern Africa, “among the oldest cultures on the earth.” San people also use the hollowed-out trunks of the quiver tree for food storage.

The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species identifies quiver trees as vulnerable or decreasing, as they have suffered from large-scale mortality due to climate change in the past two decades. Like other aloes, they store water in their soft fibers, but in severe droughts, they can seal off their branches to prevent water loss.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Giant aloe
  • Plant size: Up to 26 feet tall
  • Native area: Namib Desert, Namibia, Angola
10
of 20

Hierba Negra (Mulinum spinosum)

Hierba negra (Mulinum spinosum)

Philip Kramer / Getty Images

When most people imagine deserts, they don't usually think of Patagonia, home of glaciers, where the average temperature is just above freezing. But shielded by the Andes from the humidity of the Pacific Ocean, Patagonia receives little rain. Mulinum spinosum, known in Spanish as Hierba negra (“black grass”) or Neneo flowers in English, is a cushion plant, forming a low-growing mat (to protect it from harsh winds) and producing yellow flowers.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Small shrub
  • Plant size: Up to 40 inches tall
  • Native area: Patagonia, Argentina
11
of 20

Desert Rose (Adenium obesum)

Desert Rose (Adenium obesum)

zanskar / Getty Images

Also known as the Desert Azalea or Bottle Tree, Adenium obesum is a popular flowering plant, cultivated in the bonsai tradition. It has succulent gray-green stems with very few leaves and produces plumeria-looking red or pink flowers. It also carries poison in its sap that is used in hunting and fishing in parts of Africa. It survives in arid regions south of the Sahara all across the African continent and in the southern Arabian peninsula.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Succulent shrub
  • Plant size: 3-9 feet tall, 3-5 feet wide
  • Native area: Ogaden Desert, Ethiopia, Somalia, and Arabian peninsula
12
of 20

Euphrates Poplar (Populus euphratica)

Euphrates poplar (Populus euphratica)

zhouyousifang / Getty Images

In the Badain Jaran Desert in the Inner Mongolia province of China, enormous sand dunes sing and whistle in the wind, while dozens of spring-fed lakes between the dunes support animals, plants, and brave tourists. Among the attractions are the leaves of the Populus euphratica tree, which turn golden in autumn. It is used as a shade plant in agroforestry and in afforestation efforts.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Deciduous tree
  • Plant size: Up to 50 feet tall
  • Native area: Badain Jaran and Taklamakan Deserts, China, as well as arid regions of the Middle East and North Africa
13
of 20

Sotol (Dasylirion wheeleri)

Sotol (Dasylirion wheeleri)

Different_Brian / Getty Images

Also known as desert spoon, Dasylirion wheeleri is often used in xeriscaping, basket-making, fence-construction, and in food for humans and livestock. Its increased use in preparing the alcoholic drink of the same name (sotol) has led to concerns about the sustainability of its harvest. While sotol is drought- and fire-resistant, climate change has pushed it to higher elevations, restricting its habitat.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Flowering evergreen shrub
  • Plant size: 4-5 feet tall, flowering stem up to 16 feet tall
  • Native area: Chihuahuan and Sonoran Deserts, United States and Mexico
14
of 20

Teff (Eragrostis tef)

Teff (Eragrostis tef)

reidecki / Getty Images

Also known as Williams lovegrass, teff is one of a number of Eragrostis species that grow in the Sahara and sub-Saharan regions. Despite its low yield compared to wheat, teff is one of the first crops ever domesticated. Its drought tolerance and the ability of its roots to store water and prevent soil erosion have made its seeds a staple food in Ethiopia and Eritrea for millennia. Because teff is a C4 plant with a higher rate of carbon absorption than most plant species, it is seen as an important asset in carbon sequestration efforts.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Perennial grass
  • Plant size: Up to 3 feet tall
  • Native area: Saharan Desert
15
of 20

California Fan Palm (Washingtonia filifera)

California Fan Palm (Washingtonia filifera)

Solange_Z / Getty Images

Among all the palm trees of California and the Southwest, the California Fan Palm is the only native. Found along springs and streams, the California Fan Palm is not actually a tree, but a monocot plant that sends up a tall woody shoot without the annual tree rings common to trees.

But the birds, bats, beetles, and other species don't care: The “trees” are welcome refuges from the searing desert heat, like those pictured here in Furnace Creek—some of the only green vegetation in Death Valley National Park.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Palm “tree”
  • Plant size: Up to 60 feet tall
  • Native area: Mojave, Colorado, and Sonoran deserts, United States and Mexico
16
of 20

Yareta (Azorella compacta)

Yareta (Azorella compacta)

John Elk / Getty Images

The Altiplano (high plateau) of the Andes Mountains hosts both humid areas in the north and salt flats in the south. Plants and animals alike must adapt to the low oxygen levels and high UV radiation. Yareta grows wide rather than tall, forming a mound up to 20 feet in diameter. Its thick mat of leaves reduces water loss. This can also make Azorella compacta host to other plant species, increasing their value in such a challenging environment.

The plants grow roughly one-half an inch per year, but they are long-lived, with the largest estimated at 3,000 years old. It is protected by a number of South American governments, as harvesting, it is not sustainable, due to its slow rate of growth.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: mounding evergreen shrub
  • Plant size: up to 20 feet in diameter
  • Native area: Southern Altiplano, Chile, Bolivia, Argentina, Peru
17
of 20

Desert Gourd (Citrullus colocynthis)

Desert Gourd (Citrullus colocynthis)

Jeff Kingma / Getty Images

Also known as desert squash, bitter apple, vine of Sodom, and handhal, Citrullus colocynthis grows on the sand dunes of the Saharan and Arabian deserts. Looking like a watermelon but with a very bitter pulp, its seeds and flowers are edible. Water absorbed in the stem provides a welcome desert drink.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Creeping perennial herb
  • Plant size: Up to 9 feet long
  • Native area: Arabian and Saharan deserts
18
of 20

Taman (Panicum turgidum)

Taman (Panicum turgidum)

Shakeel Sha / Getty Images

Panicum turgidum is a bunchgrass that grows throughout the arid regions of Africa, Arabia, and Pakistan. It has been used as a tool for reforestation of the sub-Saharan region, as the dense bunches act as a natural nursery for seedlings of acacia trees, protecting them from grazing animals. Its root system can grow to 6 feet deep, allowing it to reach groundwater.

As climate change and water scarcity threaten traditionally grown crops in many parts of the world, the salt- and drought-tolerant Panicum turgidum is under study as a more sustainable alternative to corn (maize) as a fodder crop for domesticated animals.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Bunchgrass
  • Plant size: 3 feet tall, 3-5 feet wide
  • Native area: Sahara and Ogaden deserts, Ethiopia, Somalia, and Arabian peninsula
19
of 20

Saguaro (Carnegiea gigantea)

Saguaro (Carnegiea gigantea)

benedek / Getty Images

Saguaro is perhaps the most iconic desert plant in the world, common to the overlapping cultures of Mexico and the American Southwest. It is a native of the Sonoran Desert, which straddles both countries. Increasing periods of drought due to climate change, as well as increased human development in the region, have threatened the saguaro and other species of cacti.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Cactus
  • Plant size: Up to 40 feet tall
  • Native area: Sonoran Desert, United States and Mexico
20
of 20

Camel Thorn (Alhagi Sparsifolia)

Camel Thorn (Alhagi Sparsifolia)

loonger / Getty Images

The Taklamakan Desert in northwest China is one of the largest sand deserts in the world, with vegetation growing only in depressions among the sand dunes where groundwater is accessible. Alhagi Sparsifolia is one of a number of Alhagi species known as camel thorns, the welcome fodder of many Silk Road caravanserai. (Alhagi means “pilgrim” in Arabic.) Proportionally, it has the deepest roots of any plant: 5 times deeper than their above-ground shoots are tall. It has been used to counter desertification.

Desert Plant Facts

  • Plant type: Deciduous tree
  • Plant size: 2 feet tall
  • Native area: Deserts of the Middle East, Western Asia, and Africa
The Lut Desert
The Plain of Emptiness.

Westend61 / Getty Images

The Lut Desert, known in Persian as the “Plain of Emptiness,” out-rivals Death Valley as one of the hottest places on Earth, with world-record temperatures of 177.4 degrees F set in May 2021. A decade earlier, the world record, also set in the Lut Desert, was 159 degrees F.

While the setting is so stunning that it was placed on UNESCO's World Heritage List in 2016, no plant life grows there except in scattered oases. The insects, reptiles, and foxes of the desert survive off migratory birds that have fallen from the sky, struck down by the heat in this uninhabitable earth. In an age of increasingly extreme environments fueled by climate change, the Plain of Emptiness is a stark reminder that even the hardiest of desert survivors have their limits.

View Article Sources
  1. Misra, P. et al. “Welwitschia Mirabilis – Induction, Growth and Organization of Mature Leaf Callus.” Current Science, vol. 109, no. 3, 2015, pp. 567-571.

  2. Henschel, Joh R. et al. “Roots Point to Water Sources of Welwitschia mirabilis in a Hyperarid Desert.” Ecohydrology, vol. 12, no. 1, 2019, pp. e2039., doi:10.1002/eco.2039

  3. Hayes, Willard E., et al. “Competitive Abilities of Tamarix aphylla in Southern Nevada.” Plant Ecology, vol. 202, 2009, pp. 159-167., doi:10.1007/s11258-008-9569-9

  4. Long, Yan, et al. “De Novo Assembly of the Desert Tree Haloxylon ammodendron (C. A. Mey.) Based on RNA-Seq Data Provides Insight into Drought Response, Gene Discovery and Marker Identification.” BMC Genomics, vol. 15, 2014., doi:10.1186/1471-2164-15-1111

  5. Anton, Donald K. and Dinah L. Shelton. "Environmental Protection and Human Rights." Cambridge University Press, 2011, pp. 640.

  6. Van der Merwe, H. and C. Geldenhuys. “Proposed Long-Term Monitoring Protocol and Applications for Aloidendron dichotomum Populations.” South African Journal of Botany, vol. 109, 2017, pp. 253-262., doi:10.1016/j.sajb.2017.01.008

  7. Becerra-López, Jorge. Luis, et al. “Climatic Change and Habitat Availability for Three Sotol Species in México: A Vision Towards Their Sustainable Use.” Sustainability, vol. 12, no. 8, 2020, pp. 3455., doi:10.3390/su12083455

  8. Brusca, Richard C., et. al. “Dramatic Response to Climate Change in the Southwest: Robert Whittaker's 1963 Arizona Mountain Plant Transect Revisited.” Ecology and Evolution, vol. 3, no. 10, 2013, pp. 3307-3319., doi:10.1002/ece3.720

  9. Assefa, Kebebew, et. al. “Genetic Diversity in Tef [Eragrostis tef (Zucc.) Trotter].” Frontiers in Plant Science, vol. 26, 2015, pp. 177., doi:10.3389/fpls.2015.00177

  10. Pugnaire, Francisco I., et al. “Azorella Compacta: Survival Champions in Extreme, High-Elevation Environments.” Ecosphere, vol. 11, no. 2, 2020., doi:10.1002/ecs2.3031

  11. Anthelme, F., et al. “Positive Associations Involving the Tussock Grass Panicum turgidum Forssk. in the Aïr-Ténéré Reserve, Niger.” Journal of Arid Environments, vol. 68, no. 3, 2007, pp. 348-362., doi:10.1016/j.jaridenv.2006.07.007

  12. Khan, M. Ajmal, et. al. “Panicum turgidum, A Potentially Sustainable Cattle Feed Alternative to Maize for Saline Areas.” Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, vol. 129, no. 4, 2009, pp. 542-546., doi:10.1016/j.agee.2008.10.014

  13. Conver, Joshua L., et al. “Demographic Changes Over >70 yr in a Population of Saguaro Cacti (Carnegiea gigantea) in the Northern Sonoran Desert.” Journal of Arid Environments, vol. 139, 2017, pp. 41-48., doi:10.1016/j.jaridenv.2016.12.008

  14. Li, Juan, et al. “Evaluation Algorithm of Alhagi Sparsifolia Desertification Control Under Different Irrigation Amounts.” Earth Sciences Research Journal, vol. 24, no. 4, 2020, pp. 449-457.,doi:10.15446/esrj.v24n4.91626

  15. Stone, Richard. “Move Over, Death Valley: These Are the Two Hottest Spots on Earth.” Science, 2021. doi:10.1126/science.abj5470

  16. Mildrexler, David J., et al. “Satellite Finds Highest Land Skin Temperatures on Earth.” Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, vol. 92, no. 7, 2011, pp. 855-860., doi:10.1175/2011BAMS3067.1

  17. Stone, Richard. “The Incredible Ecosystem of Earth's Hottest Spot.” Science, 2016., doi:10.1126/science.aal0513