Collection: Adenium Arabicum Seeds — Named Thai Varieties
Adenium arabicum is not Adenium obesum with a thicker trunk. It’s a distinct species — and once you understand what it does, you’ll see why collectors around the world obsess over it.
Where obesum reaches for height, arabicum reaches for girth. The caudex develops broad, sculptural mass from an early age. The above-ground root structure fans out and anchors. Branching stays lower and more compact. The overall impression is something ancient, even in a young plant.
These seeds come from named Thai varieties — selections made by breeders who have spent decades refining caudex shape, branching habit, skin texture, and floral color. Named varieties are not random seedlings. They are the offspring of documented parent plants with predictable characteristics.
What makes Thai arabicum genetics different:
∙ Heavier caudex development from seedling stage
∙ Tighter, more defined branching patterns
∙ Broader range of flower color — cream, pink, deep red, bicolor
∙ Proven performance in container culture