Montpellier rockrose
Cistus monspeliensis
Montpellier rockrose (Cistus monspeliensis) is an evergreen Mediterranean shrub of the maquis and matorral scrublands, growing to roughly 3–4 feet with narrow, wrinkled, sticky-glandular leaves that carry a warm resinous scent in the heat. Through late spring it opens a long succession of small white five-petalled flowers, each lasting a single day. It is a plant built for the hardest sun-baked, drought-stricken, poor-soil conditions where little else thrives, which is exactly its garden value and its honest catch: it wants heat and sharp drainage, is not reliably hardy in cold-winter gardens (roughly USDA zone 8 and warmer), and where it has been introduced to a similar climate, notably California, it can naturalise and spread beyond the garden.
Climate fit: narrow (21/100)
Border
Structure
Pollinator
Light
Full sun
Water
Low water
Mature size
30-48" tall · 48" apart
Hardy in zones
8a-10b
cold to mild winters
Native in Illinois
No
The open, pollen-rich white flowers are worked by bees and other insects through late spring; each bloom lasts only a day, but the plant opens a long succession of them.
Cold hardiness
These values are location-based: this location's current hardiness is the baseline, and the 2050 value is a projected future climate for this same location.
Now
Zone 6b
Plotwright
USDA Zone 6b
-5°F to 0°F
Won't grow here
Zone 7a
Plotwright
0°F to 5°F
Won't grow here
In plain terms: This location has cold winters. Its winters are projected to keep warming through 2050.
✕
Out of range today and still out of range in 2050.
Heat tolerance
Heat tolerance values are location-based too: heat days today are observed at this site, and the 2050 value projects this same location under a future climate.
Loading AHS heat-zone data for this location...
Where this plant fits
Suitable across 39 ecoregions - 34 climate-resilient through 2070 · 5 newly possible by 2070. Best matches first.
Appalachian mixed mesophytic forests
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Appalachian-Blue Ridge forests
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Arizona Mountains forests
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Atlantic coastal pine barrens
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California coastal sage and chaparral
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Canadian Aspen forests and parklands
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Central Pacific Northwest coastal forests
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Central-Southern Cascades Forests
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Chihuahuan desert
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Chilean Matorral
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Plant this, not that
Better fit for this place
For Chicago, IL, these are replacement suggestions: similar plants with a stronger hardiness fit now and/or in 2050.
Fothergilla gardenii
Dwarf fothergilla
Dwarf fothergilla (Fothergilla gardenii), also called dwarf witch alder, is a compact, slow-growing deciduous shrub of the southeastern US coastal plain, native from North Carolina south through South Carolina and Georgia to Alabama and the Florida panhandle. It earns its place for two clear seasons of interest. In spring, before or just as the leaves unfold, it carries short, fragrant, bottlebrush-like spikes of tiny petal-less flowers, and the whole white show comes from a dense mass of stamens rather than from any petals. In autumn the tidy blue-green leaves colour up in a mix of yellow, orange, and red, often several of those tones on one plant at once. It is a well-behaved small native shrub, usually staying around 2 to 3 feet high and about as wide, that wants an acidic, humus-rich, evenly moist but well-drained soil and full sun to part shade. In the wild it grows in wet pine savannas, pocosins, and bog margins, so it dislikes hot, dry, or limy ground and can spread slowly into a colony by root suckers.
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited
Cotoneaster horizontalis
Creeping Cotoneaster
Creeping cotoneaster is a deciduous spreading shrub native to the mountains of central and southwestern China, Nepal, and Taiwan, prized for its distinctive flat herringbone branching, tiny pink-white summer flowers, and masses of vivid red autumn berries that sustain birds through winter. It holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit and tolerates poor, dry soils on banks and walls where little else will perform. The honest catch is twofold: the berries are mildly toxic to humans and pets (cyanogenic seeds, GI-irritant flesh), and the plant self-seeds freely enough that it is naturalising widely in the UK and Ireland and is considered potentially invasive - a real concern before planting near wild margins or hedgerows.
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited
Physocarpus opulifolius
Common ninebark
A native North American deciduous shrub with exfoliating bark (hence "ninebark"), white-to-pink spring flower clusters, papery red seedpods, and reliable fall color. Colored-foliage cultivars (Diabolo, Coppertina, Summer Wine) extend the design palette. Adaptable + drought-tolerant once established.
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited
Aronia melanocarpa
Black chokeberry
A drought-and-flood-tolerant native shrub of eastern North America with brilliant three-season interest - spring white-pink flowers, glossy black antioxidant-rich late-summer berries, and brilliant wine-red fall foliage - plus an extraordinarily wide cold-hardiness range (USDA 3a-8b). The berries are astringent fresh but the basis of a small but growing commercial industry (juices, wines, jams, supplements) for their exceptionally high anthocyanin content. Spreads by suckers; site where colony formation is welcome.
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited
Similar plants
Browse lateral options with similar roles, light needs, size, or native-range overlap; these are not filtered for a better climate fit.
Salvia microphylla
Baby sage
A bushy, semi-evergreen small shrub (subshrub) grown for an exceptionally long succession of two-lipped flowers - classically bright red or magenta-pink, with many named cultivars such as the bicolour 'Hot Lips' - borne from early summer right up to the first frosts. Its small aromatic leaves are often said to smell of blackcurrant when crushed. One of the very best garden plants for pollinators in a hot, dry, sunny spot, it is tough and free-flowering but only borderline hardy (RHS H4): in cold-winter climates it needs a warm, sheltered position and sharp drainage and is often grown as a tender perennial. It is an ORNAMENTAL salvia and is NOT the culinary sage (that is Salvia officinalis) - it is grown for flowers and pollinators, not for food.
Cotoneaster horizontalis
Creeping Cotoneaster
Creeping cotoneaster is a deciduous spreading shrub native to the mountains of central and southwestern China, Nepal, and Taiwan, prized for its distinctive flat herringbone branching, tiny pink-white summer flowers, and masses of vivid red autumn berries that sustain birds through winter. It holds the RHS Award of Garden Merit and tolerates poor, dry soils on banks and walls where little else will perform. The honest catch is twofold: the berries are mildly toxic to humans and pets (cyanogenic seeds, GI-irritant flesh), and the plant self-seeds freely enough that it is naturalising widely in the UK and Ireland and is considered potentially invasive - a real concern before planting near wild margins or hedgerows.
Fothergilla gardenii
Dwarf fothergilla
Dwarf fothergilla (Fothergilla gardenii), also called dwarf witch alder, is a compact, slow-growing deciduous shrub of the southeastern US coastal plain, native from North Carolina south through South Carolina and Georgia to Alabama and the Florida panhandle. It earns its place for two clear seasons of interest. In spring, before or just as the leaves unfold, it carries short, fragrant, bottlebrush-like spikes of tiny petal-less flowers, and the whole white show comes from a dense mass of stamens rather than from any petals. In autumn the tidy blue-green leaves colour up in a mix of yellow, orange, and red, often several of those tones on one plant at once. It is a well-behaved small native shrub, usually staying around 2 to 3 feet high and about as wide, that wants an acidic, humus-rich, evenly moist but well-drained soil and full sun to part shade. In the wild it grows in wet pine savannas, pocosins, and bog margins, so it dislikes hot, dry, or limy ground and can spread slowly into a colony by root suckers.
Cistus albidus
Grey-leaved cistus
An evergreen western-Mediterranean rockrose for the hottest, driest, leanest corner of a full-sun garden. Soft grey-felted foliage carries large, papery, crumpled pink flowers through spring and early summer, each open for a single day. Built for drought and poor soil, it is short-lived and resents wet, cold, or rich ground - a plant to site hard and never to pamper.
Phlomis fruticosa
Jerusalem sage
Jerusalem sage (Phlomis fruticosa) is an evergreen Mediterranean shrub grown for its bold foliage and its distinctive tiered flowers. Through spring and into early summer the stems carry whorl upon whorl of hooded, butter-yellow blooms stacked in neat tiers up the stem, set against sage-like, wrinkled, grey-green leaves that are softly felted with hairs. Despite the name it is not a true sage and is not culinary - it is grown purely as an ornamental. It is a tough, sun-loving, drought-tolerant shrub for hot, dry, sharply-drained places: gravel gardens, Mediterranean-style borders, and hot sunny banks. The honest caveat is that it resents wet, heavy soil and cold winters; it is only borderline hardy (RHS H4), so in cold-winter areas it needs a warm, sheltered spot and very sharp drainage to come through. Trim it lightly after flowering to keep it bushy and compact, leave the dried seedheads for winter structure, and enjoy it as the good bee plant it is.
Coronilla valentina
Shrubby scorpion vetch
Coronilla valentina is a compact, evergreen Mediterranean shrub in the legume family (Fabaceae), with a native range spanning the Mediterranean Basin from Portugal and Spain through Italy, the NW Balkans and Greece to the Aegean and Turkey, and south across northwest Africa to Libya. In a warm, sheltered garden spot it rewards with prolific, intensely honey-scented yellow flowers from late winter into summer and handsome glaucous foliage year-round. The honest catch is cold-hardiness: RHS rates it H4 (hardy to about -10 °C), so it is borderline at the cold edge of USDA zone 7 and is liable to be cut to the ground or killed outright in a hard freeze, demanding a sheltered south- or west-facing wall in colder gardens - and the whole plant is toxic to humans and livestock.
Educator packet
Plant packet
Montpellier rockrose educator packet
Montpellier rockrose (Cistus monspeliensis) is an evergreen Mediterranean shrub of the maquis and matorral scrublands, growing to roughly 3–4 feet with narrow, wrinkled, sticky-glandular leaves that carry a warm resinous scent in the heat. Through late spring it opens a long succession of small white five-petalled flowers, each lasting a single day. It is a plant built for the hardest sun-baked, drought-stricken, poor-soil conditions where little else thrives, which is exactly its garden value and its honest catch: it wants heat and sharp drainage, is not reliably hardy in cold-winter gardens (roughly USDA zone 8 and warmer), and where it has been introduced to a similar climate, notably California, it can naturalise and spread beyond the garden.
Scientific name
Cistus monspeliensis
Plant type
shrub
Hardiness
8a-10b
Light
full-sun
Moisture
low
Spacing
48 inches
Classroom prompts
- Which plant traits are observations, and which are care recommendations?
- How would this plant fit change if the garden location moved warmer, colder, wetter, or drier?
- Which source-backed facts would you cite in a lesson handout?
Use the Sources & citations section below for page citation styles and the field-level source list.
Sources & citations
Cite this page
For lesson plans, articles, or research that uses this page. To cite a single upstream fact instead, use its specific source listed below.
Plotwright. (2026, May 17). Montpellier rockrose (Cistus monspeliensis). Retrieved 2026, July 14, from https://plotwright.com/plants/cistus-monspeliensis
Sources for every fact
Every fact on this page traces to a source. 18 fields cited - 18 source-backed.
RHS Find a Plant
Botanical research database
Backs 17 fields
Identity
Summary
Plant type
Light
Moisture
Hardiness
Heat zone
Size
Spacing
Habit
Design roles
Seasonal interest
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Regional guidance
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Designer notes