Twinflower - Sierra Club BC
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Twinflower

CAN BE FOUND IN:

Twinflower

Linnaea borealis 

Appearance

Twinflower is a short trailing shrub, less than 10 centimetres tall, with long stems that run along the ground and send up shoots. The leaves are small and oval, and the pink trumpet-shaped flowers bloom in pairs at the top of the stem 

range & habitat

Twinflowers are most common in the northern half of B.C., but they are found throughout the whole province, as well as in the Yukon and Alaska down to California and New Mexico. They usually grow in shaded areas on mossy beds or under shrubs. They are happy in dry, moist, swampy or forested areas. 

reciprocal relationships

Twinflower is named after its two pink flowers that pop up from the stem in the late spring and summer. Bees and other insects enjoy these scented flowers and the nectar within them. In return, these insects pollinate twinflower. The flowers ripen into small seeds that have hooks on them. The hooks catch on passing animals, and the animals carry the seeds throughout the forest. They also spread with their trailing stems. 

White-tailed deer will occasionally graze on twinflower, and it is one of the mammals that seeds hook onto to be carried throughout the forest. The leaves are good for teas! 

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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