Data provided by the participants of the Consortium of California Herbaria

View additional distribution information on the Jepson eflora

Lycium cooperi is a species of flowering plant in the nightshade family known by the common name peach thorn. It is native to the southwestern United States, where it grows in a variety of desert and mountain habitat types. This is a bushy, erect shrub approaching a maximum height of 4 meters with many rigid, thorny branches. The branches are lined thickly with fleshy oval or widely lance-shaped leaves each 1 to 3 centimeters long and coated with hairy hairs. The flower cluster is a small cluster of tubular flowers roughly 1 to 2 centimeters long including the calyx of fleshy sepals at the base. The flower is white or greenish with lavender or green veining. The corolla is a tube opening into a face with four or five lobes. The fruit is a yellow or orange berry under a centimeter wide containing many seeds.

Plant type

Shrub

Size

13 ft Tall

Calscape icon
Color

Lavender

Flowering season

Spring

Sun

Full Sun

Soil drainage

Fast

Site type

Sandy rocky flats, washes

Plant communities

Creosote Bush Scrub, Pinyon-Juniper Woodland

Hummingbirds
Bees
Butterflies

Pollinators supported

1 confirmed and 43 likely

  • Likely

  • Confirmed

White-lined Sphinx Moth

Hyles lineata

Sleepy Orange

Abaeis nicippe

Ridings' Forester Moth

Alypia ridingsii

Anthidium palmarum