Size: Up to 3 feet (.91 m) or more; 6 feet (1.8 m).
Growth Form: Indigobush is a shrub or subshrub with multiple branches; plants scraggly; low-growing, woody, stems are grayish-brown without spines or thorns.
Flower Color: Indigobush has bright purple and pink flowers with yellow throats, extremely showy, flower is pea-like in short spike-like clusters; flowers with silk hair on the outsides; flowers somewhat fuzzy and feathery in appearance; fruit is a small, hairy pod.
Flowering Season: March or April to October; blooms again after monsoon rainfall.
Elevation: 2,000 to 6,500 feet (610 - 1,981 m).
Habitat Preferences: Dry rocky areas and hillsides, mountains, plains; generally poor soils in limestone and/or caliche soils; habitat types include mid-elevation desert grasslands and Pinyon/Juniper communities.
Recorded Range:Dalea formosa is found in the southwest in AZ, CO, NM, OK and TX. It is also native to northern and north-eastern Mexico.
North America & US County Distribution Map for Dalea formosa.
North America species range map for Indigobush, Dalea formosa:
Click image for full size map.
Genus Information: In North America, USDA Plants Database lists 108native species for Dalea; Worldwide, World Flora Online includes 223 accepted species names for the genus and The Plant List shows 233 records for Dalea including varieties.
Members of the genus Dalea are known collectively as the Prairie Clovers and Indigo Bush.
In the Southwestern United States: Arizona has 32 species of genus, California, Nevada and Utah each have 4 species, New Mexico has 29 species and Texas has 36 species. Data approximate, subject to revision.
Comments: Indigobush or Feathery Dalea may be used as an easy to grow, low maintenance ornamental as a low-growing ground-cover on sunny-slopes.
Indigo Bush, Dalea formosa has attractive flowers, the flowers and their seeds may be visited by hummingbirds and/or small mammals including rodents and granivorous birds in search of nectar or food.
Livestock, deer and rabbits are known to browse on this plant.
Beneficial Value to Butterflies and Insects
Indigo Bush, Dalea formosa has attractive flowers, the flowers and their plants may be visited by butterflies, moths, flies, Native Bees and other insects in search of food and nectar.
According to The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation or other source, Indigo Bush, Dalea formosa is recognized by pollination ecologists as attracting large numbers of Honeybees.
****Special Value to Native Bees****
According to The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation or other source, Indigo Bush, Dalea formosa, is recognized by pollination ecologists as attracting large numbers of Native bees. Click here for more information on their Pollinator Conservation Program.
****Special Value to Bumble Bees****
According to The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation or other source, Indigo Bush, Dalea formosa, is recognized by pollination ecologists as attracting large numbers of Bumble Bees. Click here for more information on their Pollinator Conservation Program.