Native Succulents

Succulents are popular and for good reasons!

Story and photos by Anita Westervelt, Texas Master Naturalist

Succulents are fun, nearly care free and reproduce relatively easily on their own. They can make an excellent ground cover and are just as interesting and easy to care for in pots and containers. For the xeriscape gardener, native succulents are an ideal match; they survive with the barest amounts of water.

Succulents, unlike cactus, have no spines, thorns or spikey daggers.

The native habitat of the Rio Grande Valley has its own variety of succulents. One of the more popular species, although becoming harder to find, is Texas stonecrop (Lenophyllum texanum [Sedum texanum], in the Crassulaceae family.

Texas Stonecrop, (Photo by Anita Westervelt)

Sedums, also called stonecrops, are plants that have thick fleshy leaves, fleshy stalks and clusters of white, yellow or pink flowers. They generally root wherever they touch the soil. Alternately, their leaves fall easily and take root, forming new plants.

Texas stonecrop is a creeping variety of sedum. It is a perennial and excellent in a rock or succulent garden or as a ground cover.

Its native habitat is near the coast on sand or sandy soil. It forms mats, often under cacti and other shrubs on the coastal plains and in the lower Rio Grande valley. In Cameron County this species can be found in shade in the native thorn scrub. In Starr County it grows in cracks in limestone at the tops of mesas.

A caution if used as a ground cover, rabbits and tortoises eat this plant. Consider growing it in a container where it will eventually spill over the sides. Whether in the ground or a container, a very porous soil is important; good drainage is a must.

Sedums grow best in full sun, however, stonecrops can get sun scald in extremely hot, dry Valley conditions. They can successfully be grown in partial shade. Texas stonecrop blooms in winter with very small, inconspicuous yellow flowers on upright slender spikes.

It propagates easily from seed, cuttings, and fallen leaves or rosettes.

Texas stonecrop is host plant for Xami Hairstreak butterfly (Callophrys xami).

Another succulent that is prevalent in the valley is one you may already have and perhaps have disregarded as an unwanted weed, but reconsider, it can add maintenance free interest to a rock or succulent garden. Common purslane (Portulaca oleracea), a species in the Portulacaceae family, also called verdolaga, duckweed and pigweed, often sprouts up in sidewalk cracks, between patio pavers and other unplanned places in the garden.

Common Purslane. (Photo by Anita Westervelt)

There are two varieties, upright and prostrate. The stems of the prostrate species are hairless and can be as long as 12 inches. It blooms spring through fall. The flowers are tiny and have five yellow petals and yellow anthers. The flowers produce a many-seeded fruit.

An annual, it comes up from a taproot and does not root at the stem nodes. Historically, the petals were eaten by humans as a source of vitamin C. It is reported to have somewhat of a sour taste. If tempted to give it a try, it is cautioned to eat it in limited quantities.

A more familiar Valley species in the Portulacaceae family is chisme (Portulaca pilosa).

Chisme. (Photo by Anita Westervelt)

Sometimes confused with its close cousin, moss rose, chisme is a prostrate succulent ground cover that blooms with purplish-red flowers spring through fall. The stems can reach to six inches in length. They are matted with white, wooly hairs — an indication, some say, that the plant is not edible. It is an annual, from a taproot.

Chisme likes partial shade to full sun and does well in rocky soil. The flowers provide nectar for small butterflies. The fruit is a tiny, many-seeded capsule, and when ripe, the seed pods can be pinched, scattering the seeds where you’d like to see the plant reproduce. These three plants have a lot in common. They are sprawling plants, drought resistant, tolerant of dry, poor, but well-drained soils and easily reproduce. They are excellent specimens for xeroscaping and good candidates for container gardening when planted in a fast-draining variety of potting soil.