Genus

Ficus

The Ficus genus in the Plotwright catalog — 4 species: Common fig, Fiddle-leaf fig, Rubber plant, Weeping fig. Open any for hardiness, native range, wildlife value, and growing guidance.
Ficus carica
Common fig
An ancient Mediterranean fruit tree grown for millennia for its sweet, soft edible figs — a deciduous shrub (10-15 ft) or small tree (to 15-30 ft) with bold, deeply 3-5 lobed palmate leaves and smooth silver-gray bark that gnarls handsomely with age. Its tiny greenish flowers bloom hidden inside hollow receptacles that swell into the fruit; most cultivars are parthenocarpic, setting figs without pollination. Best in USDA Zones 8-10, it survives Zones 6-7 in sheltered, south-facing spots with winter protection or grown in containers moved indoors.
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 6a-9b
Climate: narrow
Edible
Focal point
Structure
Ficus lyrata
Fiddle-leaf fig
A tropical evergreen tree from the lowland rainforests of western and central Africa, grown almost everywhere else as a dramatic indoor specimen for its huge, glossy, fiddle- (or violin-) shaped leaves with bold sunken veins. In its native habitat it becomes a 40-foot tree, but as a houseplant or patio container plant it is typically kept to a single upright 6-15 foot trunk topped with a sculptural rosette of leaves. Winter-hardy only in the frost-free subtropics (USDA zones 10-12); everywhere colder it is a houseplant. It is famously fussy: it wants bright, steady light, even moisture, warmth, and — above all — to be left in one spot, dropping leaves in protest at cold drafts, moves, or erratic watering.
Tree
Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 10a-12b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Container
Structure
Ficus elastica
Rubber plant
A bold tropical fig from South and Southeast Asia grown almost everywhere as a houseplant for its large, glossy, leathery, deep-green (or cream- and burgundy-variegated) paddle leaves. Honesty first: in its frost-free native habitat and outdoors in USDA zones 9-12 this is a massive strangler-type fig that can reach 50-100 feet with a spreading, aerial-rooting crown — but in the homes, offices, and patio containers where almost everyone grows it, it is kept a fraction of that size by pot confinement and pruning. It is easygoing in bright indirect light and forgiving of average indoor conditions; the one real catch is its milky latex sap, a mild skin, eye, and digestive irritant that also bothers latex-sensitive people. The same latex was historically tapped to make natural rubber, which is where the name comes from.
Tree
Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 9a-12b
Climate: narrow
Container
Focal point
Structure
Ficus benjamina
Weeping fig
A large tropical evergreen tree from Asia and northern Australia, where it can reach 30 feet or more with a broad, rounded crown of arching, weeping branches clothed in glossy, pointed, 2-4 inch leaves. Across most of the world, though, it is grown as one of the most popular indoor trees, kept to 5-10 feet in a pot and valued for its graceful weeping form and dense, shiny foliage. It is hardy outdoors only in frost-free climates (USDA 10a-12b); everywhere colder it is a houseplant. Its single most famous trait is dropping its leaves dramatically whenever it is moved, drafted, over- or under-watered, or otherwise stressed - a habit new owners often mistake for death. The milky white latex in its stems and leaves is mildly toxic if eaten and is a well-known skin and airborne allergen.
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 10a-12b
Climate: narrow
Container
Structure
Focal point