Adenium obesum Photo by: K.k. Agrawal
Origin and Habitat: East Africa; Northeast Africa (Senegal, Ethiopia, Somalia and Tanzania); Arabian Peninsula ( Aden, Saudi Arabia, Oman and Yemen including Socotra) and naturalized in South Eastern Asia (Sri Lanka and Thailand). It is widely cultivated worldwide as ornamental.
Habitat: From regions where it rains frequently in the summer, but is very dry in winter.
Synonyms:
See all synonyms of Adenium obesum
Common Names include:
ENGLISH: Desert Rose, Elephants Foot, Impala Lily, Mock Azalea, Kudu, Sabi Star
CATALAN (Català): Adenium
CHINESE (中文): 沙漠玫瑰
CZECH (Čeština): Adénium
DUTCH (Nederlands): Woestijnroos, Woestijnroos plant
ESTONIAN (Eesti): Tüse adeenium, Adeenium
FINNISH (Suomi): Aavikkoruusu, Adenia, Adenium
FRENCH (Français): Rose du désert, Kudu, Sabi Star, Lis des Impalas, Baobab Chacal, Faux Baobab
GERMAN (Deutsch): Gewöhnliche Wüstenrose, Wüstenrose
INDONESIAN (Bahasa Indonesia): Adenium, Adenium Merah
ITALIAN (Italiano): Adenium, Rosa del deserto
KURDISH (كوردی / Kurdî): Gula çolistanê
MALAY (بهاس ملاي /Bahasa Melayu ): Adenium Merah
MALAYALAM (മലയാളം): അഡീനിയം
POLISH ( Polski): Adenium opasłe, Adenium arabskie
PORTUGUESE (Português): Lírio-impala, Rosa-do-deserto, Djindje-pété, Baobá-exótica, Djindje Pete, Baobá Exotica, Rosa do Desierto
RUSSIAN (Русский): Адениум толстый, Адениум тучный
SLOVENIAN (Slovenščina): Puščavska Roža, Tolsti Adenij
SWAHILI ( Kiswahili): Mdaguwande, Mwanja, Mdagu
SWEDISH (Svenska): ökenros, Ökenrossläktet
THAI (ภาษาไทย): Chuan Chom, ชวนชม
TURKISH (Türkçe): Çöl gülü
VIETNAMESE (Tiếng Việt): Sứ sa mạc, Sứ Thái Lan
Description: Adenium obesumSN|116]]SN|116]] is a succulent shrub or small tree belonging to the the oleander family. It has a pachycaul stems and a stout, swollen basal caudex with an opened crown becoming denser with age. It is evergreen or drought-deciduous and can also lose its leaves during cold spells. It is quite variable in habit and most plants in cultivation are hybrids, yet only a few cultivar names have a valid description. It is monoecious and self-sterile.
Stem: 2–4 (-6) m tall, but usually much smaller, fleshy, with a distinct irregular swollen base, or caudex up to 1 (-2) m in diameter, much of which is underground. Above ground the caudex can be globose to conical with smooth, pale greyish-green to brown bark. In mature specimens a definite caudex may no longer be recognizable as the it forms a swollen trunk with few irregularly thickened branches. The branches are smooth, greyish-green, pubescent at apex and usually upright, tortuous and irregularly spaced but sometime they are weak and spreading. The plant contains a copious sticky watery or white sap that flows from broken stem as well as from other plant parts like leaves, roots etc.
Roots: Fleshy taproot.
Leaves: Spirally arranged, clustered toward the tips of the shoots, scentless, simple entire, spathulate to obovate, fleshy, leathery in texture, hairless, shiny dark green to bluish-green above, paler green and dull below, (3-)5–12(-17) cm long and (0,5-)1–6(-8) cm broad. The apex is rounded and the base tapers into a very short petiole usually less than 2 mm long.
Flowers: Bisexual, regular, very showy and arranged in - more or less - dense, cymes that stay above the leaves, tubular with flared lips 2–5 cm long, with the outer portion 4–6 cm diameter with five petals and wavy or crinkled margins. The flowers range from red through pink to white, often with a whitish blush outward of the throat. Sepals oval 6-12 mm long, pedicel 5-9 mm long.
Blooming time: It is capable of flowering all year, even sparingly during the winter, but it is more floriferous during the dry periods of Spring and Autumn. Flowers appear often before leaves on deciduous branches, and for a time the crown is adorned only with flowers as new leaves emerge below the flowers. The flowers opening for 2-3 days.
Fruit: The fruit is a twin follicle about 10-22 cm long resembling the horns of a steer. The two follicles are united at the base, narrowly oblong, slightly recurved, pale grey-green to grey-brown, and tapering at both ends. When matured, the follicles dehisce (split) along one side to release the seeds.
Seeds: Long narrow cylindric, 10-14 mm long, brown slightly scabrid, with long silky dirty-white to golden-brown hairy tuffs (pappus) at each end so that the seed is blown along the ground like an axle with two wheels.
Chromosome number: 2n = 22
Subspecies, varieties, forms and cultivars of plants belonging to the Adenium obesum group
- Adenium arabicum Balf.f.: is similar in appearance to Adenium obesum, but creates a massive, more squat and fat caudex and has larger thick fleshy leaves. Distribution: Yemen and Saudi Arabia.
- Adenium dhofarense Rzepecky: Has large, leathery and glossy leaves and very small flowers. Distribution: Dhofar coast (Oman) and adjacent mountains of Yemen.
- Adenium obesum Roem. & Schult.: The trunk will get up to one meter in diameter, and the plant will grow op to five meters.
- Adenium obesum f. albiflorum Lodé
- Adenium obesum subs. boehmianum (Schinz) G.D.Rowley: The flowers are similar to those of A. swazicum but the leaves are broader pale grayish-green.
- Adenium obesum subs. oleifolium (Stapf) G.D.Rowley: succulent shrublet 12-40 cm high from a subterranean rootstock. It has long, narrow leaves frequently folded along the midrib. Distribution: Botswana, Namibia and S. Africa.
- Adenium obesum subs. socotranum (Vierh.) Lavranos: It is the giant of the genus, forming a massive conical trunk/caudex several metres tall and up to 2.4 m in diameter. It resembles a miniature baobab.
- Adenium obesum subs. socotranum f. cristata hort.: crested form.
- Adenium obesum subs. somalense (Balf.f.) G.D.Rowley
- Adenium obesum subs. swazicum (Stapf) G.D.Rowley: It is a dwarf shrub, up to 30 cm high, with an enlarged succulent stem with few branches. The caudex is evident only in young specimens.
- Adenium somalense var. crispum Chiov.: is a dwarf form of A. somalense (less than 30 cm tall) with white flowers heavily striped with red or completely red and a large underground napiform caudex. Distribution: Coast of southern Somalia.
Bibliography:
Major references and further lectures
1) Werner Rauh “The Wonderful World of Succulents: Cultivation and Description of Selected Succulent Plants Other Than Cacti” Smithsonian Institution Press, 1984
2) Urs Eggli “Illustrated Handbook of Succulent Plants: Dicotyledons” Springer Science & Business Media, 2002
3) Guides and Handbooks of Africa Publishing Company “Welcome to Aden: A Comprehensive Guidebook” Guides and handbooks of Africa publishing Company, 1963
4) Gordon D. Rowley “Pachypodium and Adenium” Cactus File, Cirio Pub. Services, 1999
5) Umberto Quattrocchi “CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants: Common Names, Scientific Names, Eponyms, Synonyms, and Etymology” (5 Volume Set) CRC Press, 03 May 2012
6) Shahina A. Ghazanfar “Handbook of Arabian Medicinal Plants” CRC Press, 24 August 1994
7) Wikipedia contributors. "Adenium obesum." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 12 Sep. 2015. Web. 13 Sep. 2015.
8) Berhaut, J. “Flore illustrée du Senegal.” 1971.
9) Compton, R. H. “The flora of Swaziland.” 1976.
10) Eggli, U. “Sukkulenten.” 1994.
11) Hedberg, I. & S. Edwards. “Flora of Ethiopia.” 1989 (and Eritrea. 2000)
12) Keay, R. W. J. & F. N. Hepper. “Flora of west tropical Africa”, ed. 2.1953–1972.
13) Ross, J. “The flora of Natal.” 1972.
14) Smitinand, T. & K. Larsen, eds. “Flora of Thailand.” 1970.
15) Thulin, M., ed. “Flora of Somalia.” 1993.
16) Turrill, W. B. et al., eds. “Flora of tropical East Africa.” 1952
17) Wood, J. R. I. “A handbook of the flora of Yemen.” 1997.
18) Otto Stapf. “Flora of Tropical Africa”, Vol 4, Part 1, page 24, 1904.
19) Dr J.P. Roux “Flora of South Africa” 2003.
20) Schmelzer, G.H.; A. Gurib-Fakim . “Medicinal Plants. Plant Resources of Tropical Africa.” 2008
Adenium obesum Photo by: Andrea B. Adenium obesum Photo by: K.k. Agrawal Adenium obesum Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Adenium obesum (Desert Rose) Photo by: Andrea B. Adenium obesum Photo by: K.k. Agrawal Adenium obesum Photo by: Valentino Vallicelli Flowering habit from habitat collected seeds in Zimbabwe. At Cycad International, Katherine, Northern Territory, Australia. Photo by: Josef Cycad Perner Adenium obesum Photo by: Alexander Arzberger Cultivation and Propagation: Originally from arid to semi-arid regions, Adenium obesumSN|116]]SN|116]] is nonetheless frequently cultivated in humid tropical or semi-tropical areas. It is nearly evergreen if grown in a warm greenhouse or tropical conditions a and watered, but can loose its leaves and forced into a long winter dormancy in cooler climate. New growth begins early in spring. Outdoors it thrives on a xeric watering regime as required by cacti. Under ideal conditions, it can live for hundreds of years.
Pots and soils: It like pots with generous drain holes on sides and bottom, need a very porous potting medium media (add pumice, vulcanite, perlite, sand or brick chips into regular soil, or a cactus mix) seeing that the main trunk is planted with the majority of the roots below the caudex line. Its rare that adeniums will use the upper third of their soil and often this area serves like a mulch or support for the stem. Avoid choosing a very deep pot as this might encourage an oblong (carrot-shaped) underground caudex. Outdoors they adapt to a wide range drained soils.
Fertilization: To make plants develop a large swollen base/trunk and to increase flowering, they require a fertilizer rich in potassium, phosphorus and micronutrient without a too high nitrogen content. Fertilize regularly while the plant is growing.
Exposition: Bright filtered light is best but in areas where light is not as burning, plants may be kept outdoors in full sun unprotected but remember that caudex is very susceptible to sun scalding. Plant becomes leggy in the shade and its flowering reduced.
Water: Water plants preferably in the early mornings until the soil is well wetted and let excess water drains from the pot base. Watering can be done as they become drier during active growth season. Never allow plants to dry out too often as this causes them to go into early dormancy. Many plants simply never get enough water to grow and flower adequately so keep them active and growing by providing them with all the essential necessities. Water sparingly during winter months.
Drought Tolerance: High.
Hardiness: It is frost sensitive and cannot endure freezing temperatures (U.S.D.A. Zone: 10a-12). If temperatures regularly fall below 2° C, the plant should be grown in a container for moving into a cold protected area. Partial defoliation may also occur at other times in response to weather change. As an indoor plant ensures a minimum temperature in winter of 10 °C. Where year-round temperature is sufficiently warm, desert rose will not become dormant and deciduous and may be ever-blooming.
Salt Tolerance: Medium.
Maintenance: They should be re-potted frequently until they attain their desired size. Plant appearance varies from plant to plant so prune accordingly. Pruning above the leaves is more likely
to produce multiple branching than pruning further down on the plant on bare stem. Pinching or pruning should be done once a year during the growing season. Pruning during winter often fails to generate robust branching.
Uses: Specimen plant; patio; flowering container plant; Bonsai, rock gardens, pool side.
Bonsai: Adenium obesumSN|116]]SN|116]] is suitable for most bonsai styles, it is a relatively fast grower: a seedling can develop into a rewarding bonsai in as little as five years. Many specimens develop interesting large, twisted bases and roots. Branches can be wired and growing tips pruned or pinched to encourage branching and compact. Keeping a plant root-bound is one method of achieving a bonsai plant. After the first 3 year’s of the plant’s life, raise the plant at each re-potting, exposing more and more of the underground caudex and roots.
Pests & diseases: Occasional aphids, mealybugs, scales and leaf spots. It is especially susceptible to spider mite infestation.
Warning: All parts of Desert Rose are potentially very poisonous and should be kept out of reach of children and animals. It must be handled with care. avoiding direct contact by always using gloves or covering your hands with plastic bags when handling it.
Propagation: Seed, grafting or cuttings. Seeds are placed on the surface of the soil mixture for germination. Seeds germinate easily, and seedlings grow without any special attention. Seedlings are also grown as the rootstock for grafted plants. The numerous hybrids are propagated mainly by grafting on to seedling rootstock. While plants grown from seed are more likely to have the swollen caudex at a young age, with time many cutting-grown plants cannot be distinguished from seedlings. Propagation by cutting is also possible, cut end shoots and let dry for a day or two. Be careful of the toxic sap. Stick shoots into a pot of moist soil, and provide bottom heat. Keep soil moist. The best time for either method is in the spring.
Your Photos
by K.k. Agrawal
by Andrea B.