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Wild Cherry Farm
Shop
Species of Concern
Bees
Specialist Bees
Threatened or Endangered Bees
Butterflies
American Lady
Baltimore Checkerspot
Black Swallowtail
Common Buckeye
Eastern Tailed-Blue
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Giant Swallowtail
Great Spangled Fritillary
Hummingbird Clearwing
Monarch
Mourning Cloak
Pearl Crescent
Red-Spotted Purple
Silver-Spotted Skipper
Spicebush Swallowtail
Spring Azure
Viceroy
Wild Indigo Duskywing
Blog
Plant Search
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0
Shop
Species of Concern
Folder: Bees
Back
Specialist Bees
Threatened or Endangered Bees
Folder: Butterflies
Back
American Lady
Baltimore Checkerspot
Black Swallowtail
Common Buckeye
Eastern Tailed-Blue
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Giant Swallowtail
Great Spangled Fritillary
Hummingbird Clearwing
Monarch
Mourning Cloak
Pearl Crescent
Red-Spotted Purple
Silver-Spotted Skipper
Spicebush Swallowtail
Spring Azure
Viceroy
Wild Indigo Duskywing
Blog
Plant Search
Shop Native Plants Wood Poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum)
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Wood Poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum)

$5.00
In Production

While the Wood Poppy may not be a wildlife rock star, it provides a delightful splash of yellow after a long winter and in the shade no less. If you are lucky, it will do a bit of self-seeding, but the seedlings are easy to weed out if necessary. Little is known about the floral-faunal relationships for this species, but the flowers provide only pollen as a reward to floral visitors. It is also likely that the flowers are visited by various bees and flies (Illinoiswildflower.info). The seeds are distributed to new locations by ants, which are attracted to their oily appendages. An added benefit, the toxic foliage is avoided by mammalian herbivores. This plant should not be confused with Greater Celandine, a Eurasian invasive biennial. The leaves and flowers of the two can be very difficult to distinguish, but they are very different in the seeding stage; Chelidonium has a long, hairless "legume" look, while Stylophorum's fuzzy pods are unmistakable.

Photo Credit: Bennit2006

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While the Wood Poppy may not be a wildlife rock star, it provides a delightful splash of yellow after a long winter and in the shade no less. If you are lucky, it will do a bit of self-seeding, but the seedlings are easy to weed out if necessary. Little is known about the floral-faunal relationships for this species, but the flowers provide only pollen as a reward to floral visitors. It is also likely that the flowers are visited by various bees and flies (Illinoiswildflower.info). The seeds are distributed to new locations by ants, which are attracted to their oily appendages. An added benefit, the toxic foliage is avoided by mammalian herbivores. This plant should not be confused with Greater Celandine, a Eurasian invasive biennial. The leaves and flowers of the two can be very difficult to distinguish, but they are very different in the seeding stage; Chelidonium has a long, hairless "legume" look, while Stylophorum's fuzzy pods are unmistakable.

Photo Credit: Bennit2006

While the Wood Poppy may not be a wildlife rock star, it provides a delightful splash of yellow after a long winter and in the shade no less. If you are lucky, it will do a bit of self-seeding, but the seedlings are easy to weed out if necessary. Little is known about the floral-faunal relationships for this species, but the flowers provide only pollen as a reward to floral visitors. It is also likely that the flowers are visited by various bees and flies (Illinoiswildflower.info). The seeds are distributed to new locations by ants, which are attracted to their oily appendages. An added benefit, the toxic foliage is avoided by mammalian herbivores. This plant should not be confused with Greater Celandine, a Eurasian invasive biennial. The leaves and flowers of the two can be very difficult to distinguish, but they are very different in the seeding stage; Chelidonium has a long, hairless "legume" look, while Stylophorum's fuzzy pods are unmistakable.

Photo Credit: Bennit2006

Life Cycle: Perennial

Sun Exposure: Partial, Shade

Soil Moisture: Medium-wet, Medium, Medium-dry

Height: 12 inches

Plant Spacing: 10-12 inches

Bloom Time: April-May

Bloom Color: Yellow

Advantages: Deer Resistant, Great landscaping plant

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