Freesia leichtlinii aka Freesia
Taxonomy ID: 4463
Freesia leichtlinii is a tuberous geophyte in the iris family (Iridaceae), formally described by Klatt in Gartenflora in 1874. It is native to the south-southwestern and southern Cape Provinces of South Africa, where it grows in sandy soils within coastal bush, thicket, and restioid fynbos. The genus name commemorates the German physician Friedrich Heinrich Theodor Freese, while the species epithet honours the German horticulturist Max Leichtlin.
The plant is a small, cormous perennial that reaches roughly 6 to 25 cm in height, with sword-shaped leaves and slender flowering stems carrying fragrant, cream-coloured tubular flowers marked with yellow. Two recognised subspecies — subsp. alba (the so-called "Antique White Freesia") and the autonym subsp. leichtlinii — differ in tepal colouring and perianth-tube length; the alba subspecies has white to cream flowers flushed purple with yellow-orange markings, while subsp. leichtlinii is pale yellow to cream with deep yellow to orange basal markings. Freesia alba was consolidated as a subspecies of F. leichtlinii in 2010 following the Manning and Goldblatt monograph. The sole nomenclatural synonym is Nymanina leichtlinii (Klatt) Kuntze.
Beyond its native range, F. leichtlinii (especially subsp. alba) has naturalised in California and across the Mediterranean Basin — recorded by Plants of the World Online from Argentina Northeast, California, Corsica, the East Aegean Islands, Greece, Italy, Crete, Madeira, Portugal, Sardinia, Spain, Tunisia, and Türkiye — as well as parts of the Southern Hemisphere. The species occupies a subtropical biome and is most reliably hardy only in mild coastal climates outside its native range. It is widely grown ornamentally, with environmental uses noted in Kew's records, and propagation is from seed or from cormels produced by the parent corm.
Common names
Freesia, Freesia Gentilis, Freesia Herbertii, Freesia Leichtliniana, Freesia Leichtlinii Major, Freesia Middlemostii, Freesia Muirii, Freesia Picta, Sparaxis Thoubertii, Leichtlin's FreesiaMore information about Freesia
Where is Freesia leichtlinii originally from?
Freesia leichtlinii is native to the south-southwestern and southern Cape Provinces of South Africa, where it grows on coastal sands within coastal bush, thicket, and restioid fynbos. Beyond its native range it has naturalised widely — Plants of the World Online lists it as introduced in Argentina Northeast, California, Corsica, the East Aegean Islands, Greece, Italy, Crete, Madeira, Portugal, Sardinia, Spain, Tunisia, and Türkiye, and the alba subspecies is reported as naturalised in coastal Northern California and parts of the Southern Hemisphere. The Atlas of Living Australia records no documented occurrences for the species in Australia.
Is Freesia leichtlinii fragrant?
The flowers of Freesia leichtlinii are fragrant; the Pacific Bulb Society describes them as cream-coloured scented flowers with yellow markings, consistent with the strongly perfumed reputation of the genus.
What do the flowers of Freesia leichtlinii look like?
Freesia leichtlinii bears tubular, scented flowers in cream or pale yellow tones with yellow to orange markings, carried on slender stems above sword-shaped leaves. Subsp. alba has white to cream flowers flushed purple with yellow-orange markings on the lower median tepal and perianth tubes 20–40 mm long, while subsp. leichtlinii is pale yellow or cream, lightly purple-flushed outside, with deep yellow to orange base markings on the lower three petals and shorter perianth tubes (20–25 mm).
Are there different varieties of Freesia leichtlinii?
Two infraspecific taxa are recognised by Plants of the World Online: F. leichtlinii subsp. alba — the "Antique White Freesia", with white to cream flowers flushed purple — and the autonym F. leichtlinii subsp. leichtlinii, with pale yellow to cream flowers and deep yellow-orange basal markings. The two differ chiefly in flower colour and perianth-tube length. Freesia alba was consolidated as a subspecies of F. leichtlinii in 2010, and the Atlas of Living Australia additionally treats some Australian material as a complex of garden hybrids.
Can Freesia leichtlinii be grown outdoors?
Freesia leichtlinii is best suited to mild coastal climates similar to its native South African Cape habitat. The Pacific Bulb Society notes that subsp. alba has naturalised in coastal Northern California gardens but may not be reliably hardy elsewhere, and the species' broad introduced range — California and much of the Mediterranean Basin — confirms it thrives in subtropical, winter-rainfall climates with sandy soils. Outside such regions it is typically grown as a tender corm, lifted or protected from hard frost.
How is Freesia leichtlinii propagated?
Freesia leichtlinii reproduces from seed and from cormels — small daughter corms produced alongside the parent corm — both standard propagation routes for the species.
What other uses does Freesia leichtlinii have?
Plants of the World Online flags Freesia leichtlinii as having recorded environmental uses; it is most widely grown as a fragrant ornamental and parent of cut-flower hybrids rather than for material or industrial uses.
What are the water needs for Freesia
What is the right soil for Freesia
What is the sunlight requirement for Freesia

Is Freesia toxic to humans/pets?
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