Cistus populifolius

Cistus populifolius

9x9 cm
€7,00
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Cistus populifolius

Cistus populifolius

€7,00
Organic
Sustainable
Locally grown

Cistus populifolius is a vigorous, evergreen shrub native to the Mediterranean, valued for its rapid growth, resilience, and abundant white flowers with yellow centers.

It features a spectacular flowering period lasting over two months throughout the summer.


The leaves are dark, greyish green, with a poplar feel. 

The flowers are large and ivory white, highlighted by bright gold stamens.

Highly fragrant, the blooms attract butterflies.

Though each flower lasts only a day, their abundance and continuous renewal create a spectacular floral display for several weeks.

Flowering June, July, August
Flower Color White
Exposure Full Sun
Frost Tolerance – 15ºC
Size Outdoors
Soil Dry, Poor, Sandy, Well-Draining
Origin Mediterranean
Planting Season March to May, September to November
€7,00
In stock

🪴9x9 cm

🚂 Ships across EU
🌱 Grown in our nursery

The root system is both deep and branched. It is so powerful that it can penetrate fractured rocks to extract even the slightest trace of moisture deep underground - making it one of the most drought tolerant plants of the Mediterranean region.

Container Size
Gardening Tips

✂️ Cistus can be lightly pruned after flowering and pinched back to promote a bushy growth, but avoid cutting into old wood.
🪰 Their thick leaves + resin do not attract pests, though their delicate flowers can be damaged by heavy rain
🏠 Avoid transplanting them once they are settled, as their roots do not like to be disturbed.

ENG: Gardening with Cists
FR: Jardiner avec les Cists (Rustica)

The Botany

🌸 Floral Morphology : Cistus salvifolius

Members of the Cistaceae, including the genus Cistus, typically produce solitary or cymose inflorescences with showy, crêpe-like petals.

Flowers are actinomorphic (characterized by radial symmetry), pentamerous, and range from 2 to 8 cm in diameter depending on species. Petals are usually white, pink, or purple with conspicuous yellow stamens. Sepals (3–5) are persistent and may be hairy or glabrous.

Leaves are opposite, simple, entire, and often covered with glandular trichomes secreting aromatic resins such as labdanum. This resin imparts drought resistance and fragrance.

🌱 Reproductive Biology

Flowers are hermaphroditic, often protandrous (anthers mature before stigmas), which encourages cross-pollination. Despite this, many species retain a level of self-compatibility, ensuring reproduction under low-pollinator conditions.

Pollination is predominantly entomophilous, with bees, beetles, and flies visiting for pollen rather than nectar.

Seeds are borne in dehiscent capsules containing numerous small seeds adapted for germination after disturbance (particularly fire).

🌍 Ecology & Adaptations

Cistaceae are emblematic of Mediterranean-type ecosystems on poor, rocky soils. Key adaptations include:




  • High Drought tolerance via resinous, sclerophyllous (a sclerophyll is a type of vegetation that is adapted to long periods of dryness and heat) leaves.


    Fire-related regeneration, with seeds requiring heat shock or smoke compounds to germinate.


    Symbiosis with mycorrhizal fungi (notably Tuber spp.), which enhance nutrient uptake in low-fertility soils.


The Myth

The white flowering cists are all related!

Cistus inflatus

Cistus ladanifer

Cistus laurifolius

Cistus monspeliensis

Cistus parviflorus

Cistus populifolius

Cistus salviifolius

Cistus sintenisii

The genus Cistus was named by French botanist Joseph Pitton de Tournefort, derived from the Greek Kistos, which was later Latinized as Cisthos by Pliny the Elder. The genus includes around twenty Mediterranean shrub species in the Cistaceae family, closely related to Halimium and Helianthemum.

These plants have opposite, evergreen to semi-evergreen leaves that are oval to lanceolate, sometimes elongated. Some species, like Cistus ladanifer, contain aromatic resin used to produce medicinal labdanum.

Labdanum is a sticky brown resin extracted from the Cistus plants that is still used to produce perfume and vermouth. You'll see when you touch the plant, it's quite sticky.

🔥 Their fruits are fire-resistant capsules, allowing them to reseed naturally after a wildfire.

🥷 They also suppress weed growth through allelopathy (releasing substances that inhibit weed germination) something that our friends in the Thyme family are infamous for.

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