πŸ“Œ Quick Reference β€” Key Takeaways

Data compiled from/expanded on this guide: cupaniopsis anacardioides.


πŸ“Š Tree Comparison Table

Tree (Common / Botanical) Mature Height Mature Spread Growth Rate Evergreen Pet Toxicity Human Toxicity Invasive Concern (Region) Primary Use Maintenance Climate Zone (USDA)
Carrotwood β€” Cupaniopsis anacardioides 30–40 ft 30–40 ft Slow–Moderate Yes Yes (fruit/seeds) Mild (seeds) Yes (FL, regulated) Street/shade Low 9b–11
Live Oak β€” Quercus virginiana 40–80 ft 60–100 ft Slow Yes None None No Shade/specimen Low 7b–10b
Southern Magnolia β€” Magnolia grandiflora 60–80 ft 30–50 ft Slow–Moderate Yes None None No Shade/ornamental Moderate 6–10
Chinese Elm β€” Ulmus parvifolia 40–50 ft 35–50 ft Fast Semi-evergreen None None Mild (some regions) Shade/street Moderate 4–9
Camphor Tree β€” Cinnamomum camphora 50–60 ft 50–60 ft Fast Yes Mild Mild Yes (FL, CA) Shade Low 9–11
Jacaranda β€” Jacaranda mimosifolia 25–40 ft 25–40 ft Moderate Deciduous None None Mild (CA) Ornamental/shade Moderate 9b–11
Crape Myrtle β€” Lagerstroemia indica 15–25 ft 15–20 ft Moderate–Fast Deciduous None None No Ornamental/street Low 6–9
Bottlebrush β€” Callistemon citrinus 10–25 ft 10–15 ft Fast Yes None None Mild (CA) Street/hedge Low 8–11
Tabebuia (Trumpet Tree) β€” Tabebuia spp. 25–30 ft 20–25 ft Moderate Deciduous None None No Ornamental Low 9b–11
Ficus (Laurel Fig) β€” Ficus microcarpa 25–60 ft 50–60 ft Fast Yes Mild Mild Yes (invasive roots) Shade High 9b–11
Silk Oak β€” Grevillea robusta 50–100 ft 25–40 ft Fast Yes Mild (allergen) Mild (allergen) Yes (CA, HI) Shade/timber Moderate 9–11
Chinaberry β€” Melia azedarach 30–50 ft 30–40 ft Fast Deciduous Yes (berries) Yes (berries) Yes (Southeast US) Shade Low 7–11
Green Buttonwood β€” Conocarpus erectus 20–40 ft 20–30 ft Moderate Yes None None No Coastal/street Low 10b–11
Gumbo Limbo β€” Bursera simaruba 25–40 ft 25–35 ft Moderate Semi-deciduous None None No Shade/native Low 10–11
Chinese Tallow β€” Triadica sebifera 20–40 ft 20–35 ft Fast Deciduous Yes (seeds/sap) Yes (seeds/sap) Yes (highly, banned in some states) Shade (historic) Low 8–10
Mahogany (West Indian) β€” Swietenia mahagoni 40–60 ft 40–60 ft Slow–Moderate Yes None None Mild (FL) Shade/timber Low 10–11
Golden Rain Tree β€” Koelreuteria paniculata 20–35 ft 20–35 ft Fast Deciduous Mild (seeds) Mild (seeds) Mild (some regions) Ornamental/shade Low 5–9
Weeping Bottlebrush β€” Melaleuca viminalis 15–20 ft 10–15 ft Fast Yes None None No Ornamental Low 8–11


❓ FAQ / Troubleshooting

Q: Is Carrotwood safe to plant near a home with dogs or small children? A: Not ideal. Its fruit and seeds carry mild toxicity if ingested. Live Oak, Southern Magnolia, or Green Buttonwood are non-toxic alternatives with comparable shade coverage.

Q: Why is Carrotwood restricted in Florida? A: It's classified as invasive there due to prolific seed dispersal and displacement of native coastal vegetation. Gumbo Limbo and Green Buttonwood are Florida-native substitutes with similar form.

Q: What's the fastest-growing tree in this list with low toxicity risk? A: Chinese Elm β€” fast growth, non-toxic, moderate maintenance.

Q: Which trees on this list handle coastal/salt conditions like Carrotwood does? A: Green Buttonwood, Gumbo Limbo, and Carrotwood itself are all salt-tolerant coastal performers.

Q: My tree's leaves are yellowing β€” is this common across this genus/type? A: Yellowing in broadleaf evergreens (Carrotwood, Live Oak, Magnolia) is most often overwatering or iron chlorosis in alkaline soil, not a species-specific defect.