USDA Forest Service Celebrating Wildflowers

USDA Logo and Forest Service Shield

Plant of the Week

Map of the United States showing states. States are colored green where the wild ginger may be found.
Range map of the wild ginger. States are colored green where the wild ginger may be found.

Wild Ginger (Asarum caudatum ) Lindl.

Wild ginger is a native perennial forb that is evergreen throughout most of its range. It grows as an understory plant in moist, montane forests (0-1200m (2200 feet)) of the Pacific Northwest, and is found in British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, California, Idaho, and western Montana, where it grows in zones with mild, wet winters (lows 15-25 degrees F) and warm, dry summers.

wild ginger.
Asarum caudatum. © Mary A. Carr.

Wild ginger is a member of the birthwort family (Aristolochiaceae). Deep green, hirsute, heart shaped leaves with distinctive, prominent venation, and unique purplish-brown colored flowers, with three long, radiating calyx segments, distinguish the species. Flowers are produced beneath leaves in spring-summer (April - July), and are often hidden from view. The first indication that you may have that wild ginger is near is the pungent, sweet ginger fragrance released as make your way through the forest, unknowingly treading on the leaves of this plant.

wild ginger.
Asarum caudatum. Photo by John Davis, Gifford Pinchot National Forest.

Wild ginger has slender, elongate, shallow rhizomes, and often reproduces rhizomatously, although it also reproduces sexually through the production of seeds. Seeds include a fleshy appendage rich with oils that attract ants, which act as an important dispersers of this plant. In parts of its range, wild ginger may comprise an important food source for rodents (particularly pocket gophers). The species is also palatable to slugs. Wild ginger is thought to have antibiotic properties, and Native Americans used this plant to treat headaches, intestinal pain, knee pain, arthritis, indigestion, tuberculosis, colic and as a general tonic.

For More Information: PLANTS Profile -Asarum caudatum Lindl., British Columbia wildginger

Plant of the Week

Sugarstick.
Sugarstick (Allotropa virgata)

U.S. Forest Service
Rangeland Management
Botany Program

1400 Independence Ave., SW, Mailstop Code: 1103
Washington DC 20250-1103

USA.gov logo

Location: http://www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/plant-of-the-week/asarum_caudatum.shtml
Last modified: Tuesday, 24-Jun-2008 21:58:20 EDT