Native Plants

Bush-violet

Browallia eludens

USDA symbol: BREL5

annual forb

Lower 48 states: native

If you’re drawn to unique native plants and have a thing for botanical mysteries, you might be intrigued by bush-violet (Browallia eludens). This little-known annual is one of Arizona’s more elusive native wildflowers, and frankly, there’s a lot we’re still learning about it. Bush-violet is a true Arizona native, found ...

Bush-violet may be listed as rare in your area.
Global Conservation Status

Status: S2? | Imperiled: Extremely rare. Typically 6 to 20 occurrences or 1,000 to 3,000 remaining individuals.

Bush-Violet: A Rare Arizona Native Worth Protecting

If you’re drawn to unique native plants and have a thing for botanical mysteries, you might be intrigued by bush-violet (Browallia eludens). This little-known annual is one of Arizona’s more elusive native wildflowers, and frankly, there’s a lot we’re still learning about it.

What Makes Bush-Violet Special

Bush-violet is a true Arizona native, found exclusively in the Grand Canyon State. As an annual plant, it completes its entire life cycle within a single growing season, which adds to both its charm and its conservation challenges. Unlike its more common cousin Browallia speciosa (the showy bush-violet you might find at garden centers), Browallia eludens is a rare gem that’s evolved specifically for Arizona’s unique climate conditions.

Where You’ll Find It (Or Won’t)

This plant calls Arizona home and nowhere else in the United States. Its distribution appears to be quite limited within the state, contributing to its rare status. Bush-violet tends to favor areas that are facultative wetlands in the arid West – meaning it usually grows in wetland conditions but can occasionally pop up in drier spots.

  • Species observed
  • No observations

The Rarity Factor: Why This Matters

Here’s where things get serious for a moment. Bush-violet has a Global Conservation Status of S2?, which indicates it’s quite rare and potentially vulnerable. The question mark means there’s some uncertainty about its exact status, but that uncertainty itself tells us something important – this plant hasn’t been extensively studied or documented.

What does this mean for gardeners? If you’re interested in growing bush-violet, you’ll want to be extra careful about sourcing. This isn’t a plant you should collect from the wild (that could harm already small populations), and it’s unlikely you’ll find it at your local nursery.

Growing Bush-Violet: The Honest Truth

Here’s where I have to be upfront with you – detailed growing information for Browallia eludens is pretty scarce. What we do know is:

  • It’s an annual, so you’ll need to replant each year or rely on self-seeding
  • It prefers wetland or semi-wetland conditions in Arizona’s arid climate
  • As a native Arizona plant, it’s adapted to the state’s specific growing conditions
  • It likely requires warm temperatures year-round, typical of lower elevation desert areas

Should You Grow It?

The short answer is: probably not, unless you’re a serious native plant conservationist with access to ethically sourced seeds. Bush-violet’s rarity means it’s not readily available through normal gardening channels, and attempting to wild-harvest could harm existing populations.

If you’re passionate about Arizona natives and want to support rare plant conservation, consider:

  • Contacting local native plant societies to learn about conservation efforts
  • Supporting botanical gardens that may be working with rare species
  • Growing other Arizona natives that are more readily available and better understood

The Bigger Picture

Bush-violet represents something important in the native plant world – there are still species out there that we don’t fully understand, and some that need our protection more than our cultivation. Sometimes the best way to appreciate a rare native is to learn about it, support its conservation, and choose more common natives for our gardens.

If you’re interested in supporting Arizona’s native plant diversity, consider exploring some of the state’s better-known natives that can thrive in cultivation while you keep an eye out for conservation efforts around rare species like bush-violet.

Classification

Group: Dicot
Kingdom: Plantae - Plants
Subkingdom: Tracheobionta - Vascular plants
Superdivision: Spermatophyta - Seed plants
Division: Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants
Class: Magnoliopsida - Dicotyledons
Subclass: Asteridae
Order: Solanales
Family: Solanaceae Juss. - Potato family
Genus: Browallia L. - browallia

Species: Browallia eludens R.K. Van Devender & P.D. Jenkins - bush-violet

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA