Bushclover Dodder: A Native Parasitic Plant You Probably Don’t Want in Your Garden
Meet bushclover dodder (Cuscuta pentagona var. pubescens), a native plant that’s more likely to show up uninvited in your garden than on your wish list. This unusual perennial belongs to a quirky group of plants that have essentially given up on the whole making your own food thing that most plants do. Instead, they’ve become full-time moochers, living entirely off other plants.
What Exactly Is Bushclover Dodder?
Bushclover dodder is a parasitic vine that looks nothing like your typical garden plant. Instead of leaves and sturdy stems, you’ll see thin, orange to yellow thread-like stems that twist and coil around host plants like botanical spaghetti. These stringy stems produce small clusters of tiny white to cream-colored flowers that might look delicate and pretty, but don’t let that fool you.
This plant is classified as a forb herb, meaning it’s a vascular plant without significant woody tissue. However, unlike most herbs that root in the soil and make their own food through photosynthesis, dodder has essentially outsourced those responsibilities to its unfortunate hosts.
Where You’ll Find This Native Plant
Bushclover dodder is native to the southwestern United States, naturally occurring in New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. While it’s a legitimate native species in these areas, that doesn’t necessarily make it a welcome addition to your garden.
Why Most Gardeners Avoid Bushclover Dodder
Here’s the thing about bushclover dodder: it’s a parasite. Once it finds a suitable host plant, it wraps around it and sends out structures called haustoria that penetrate the host’s stems and steal water, nutrients, and sugars. This can seriously weaken or even kill the host plant, which is probably not what you had in mind when you planted that beautiful native wildflower or shrub.
Some key reasons why intentional cultivation isn’t recommended:
- Can severely damage or kill host plants in your garden
- Spreads quickly once established
- Difficult to control without harming host plants
- Cannot survive without host plants to parasitize
Growing Conditions and Hardiness
If bushclover dodder does appear in your garden (likely uninvited), it thrives in USDA hardiness zones 7-9. It doesn’t have particular soil preferences since it doesn’t really use soil nutrients anyway – it gets everything it needs from its host plants. It can tolerate various light conditions, from full sun to partial shade, as long as suitable hosts are available.
Ecological Role and Wildlife Benefits
Before you completely write off bushclover dodder, it’s worth noting that it does play a role in native ecosystems. The small flowers can attract some pollinators, particularly small insects, though the benefits are minimal compared to other native flowering plants. In natural settings, it’s part of the complex web of plant relationships, though its impact on individual host plants can still be significant.
What to Do If You Find It
If you discover bushclover dodder in your garden, you have a few options:
- Remove it carefully by hand, making sure to get all the thread-like stems
- Cut it away from host plants, though you may need to repeat this process
- In natural areas, consider leaving it alone if it’s not threatening rare or valuable plants
Better Native Alternatives
If you’re looking for native plants for your southwestern garden, consider these alternatives that won’t parasitize your other plants:
- Native wildflowers like blanket flower or black-eyed Susan
- Native grasses such as buffalo grass or blue grama
- Shrubs like desert willow or cenizo
While bushclover dodder is certainly an interesting example of plant adaptation and survival strategy, it’s probably not the best choice for intentional garden cultivation. Appreciate it for its unique ecological niche, but maybe from a distance – and preferably in someone else’s garden or a natural area where it can do its parasitic thing without threatening your carefully tended plants.
