Squirrel Corn
Growth habit
Herbaceous
Perennation
Perennial
Native distribution
Native to the Finger Lakes Region
Cultivation
A 2-5" tall ephemeral with white flowers and delicate foliage.
Light: shade to part sun
Moisture and Soil: moist, rich soil
Propagation
Seed Treatment and Storage: give warm/moist then cold/moist stratification
Wildlife value
Squirrel corn flowers are pollinated by queen bumble bees (Bombus spp.) foraging for nectar. "Robber bees" also feed on the nectar by perforating the spurs. Seeds are dispersed by ants. Herbivores avoid the foliage.
Climate change sensitivity
Over the period from 1986 to 2015, Dicentra canadensis bloomed an average of 3.4 days later.
Poisonous
yes
Poisonous description
Like its relative dutchman's breeches (Dicentra cucullaria), all parts of squirrel corn are poisonous to cats, cattle, and humans because the plant synthesises isoquinoline, a type of neurotoxic alkaloid.
Location
Mundy Wildflower Garden, McDaniel Meadow, Woods, and Swamp, McLean Bogs, Eames Bog, Purvis Road Wetlands Natural Area
Special characteristics
This spring flower's underground tubers look like little kernels of yellow corn. Pollinators often make holes in the spurred flower to get the nectar more easily.
Status
L4|S5|G5