Wild Ginger - Sierra Club BC
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Wild Ginger

CAN BE FOUND IN:

Wild Ginger

Asarum caudatum 

Appearance

Wild ginger is an evergreen plant with thick roots and trailing stems with heart-shaped leaves on long stalks. The flowers are purple and bell-shaped with three petals. The whole plant smells like lemon-ginger when crushed. 

Range & Habitat

It is found growing in many places in North America. In B.C., it’s found mostly in the southern part of the province, and almost always in damp shaded woodlands. 

reciprocal relationships

Wild ginger gets its name from the rootstock! This stock has a strong ginger flavor. The Ojibwe will incorporate it as a flavoring for food. Wild ginger starts blooming in April, and the flowers grow into egg-shaped fruits. It sprouts easily from pieces of the root. 
Not many animals eat this plant, and it is poisonous to some caterpillars and fly larvae.

However, it does provide habitat for certain animals. It is a host plant for butterfly larvae like the pipevine swallowtail, and small animals take cover beneath this plant. 

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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