Henderson’s Shooting Star - Sierra Club BC
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Henderson’s Shooting Star

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Henderson's Shooting Star

Primula hendersonii 

Appearance

Also known as the magenta shooting star, this plant has broad, thick green leaves all joined to the same spot at the base of the plant. The flowers grow on long stems. They look like pink shooting stars, with five long petals swept back from the white centre. Some say the flowers smell spicy. The plant grows to about 40 centimetres tall. 

range & habitat

Henderson’s shooting star is only found on southeast Vancouver Island but it also grows along the coast from Washington to California. It loves to grow in meadows and open woods, and often in rocky and warm areas. In B.C. this plant is found in the Georgia Depression ecoprovince. 

reciprocal relationships

Shooting stars are a major plant in the Garry oak meadows of southern Vancouver Island. The plant flowers in the spring and early summer. Then the flowers turn into seed capsules full of tiny black seeds. These seeds and flowers are not a major food source for animals, but they are important for pollinators. Native bumblebees collect pollen from these plants for their young. 

These meadows are used for harvesting other plant bulbs. Cultural burning by First Nations has kept larger plants from taking over the meadows. These burns also encourage shooting stars, camas, and other wildflowers to grow. 

status

COSEWIC: Not Reported 
CDC: Yellow 

more information

If you belong to a First Nation with a story or piece of information not represented here and you would like to share more about this species, please email us at education@sierraclub.bc.ca.   

photo credit

Canva

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