North America Native Plant

Carolina Canarygrass

Botanical name: Phalaris caroliniana

USDA symbol: PHCA6

Life cycle: annual

Habit: grass

Native status: Native to the lower 48 states  

Carolina Canarygrass: A Versatile Native Grass for Wet Areas Looking for a native grass that doesn’t mind getting its feet wet? Meet Carolina canarygrass (Phalaris caroliniana), a hardy annual that’s perfectly at home in those soggy spots where other plants struggle. This unassuming native grass might not be the showiest ...

Carolina Canarygrass: A Versatile Native Grass for Wet Areas

Looking for a native grass that doesn’t mind getting its feet wet? Meet Carolina canarygrass (Phalaris caroliniana), a hardy annual that’s perfectly at home in those soggy spots where other plants struggle. This unassuming native grass might not be the showiest plant in your garden, but it’s definitely one of the most practical.

What Is Carolina Canarygrass?

Carolina canarygrass is a native annual grass that belongs to the graminoid family – that’s botanist-speak for grass and grass-like plants. True to its annual nature, this plant completes its entire life cycle in one growing season, making it a reliable self-seeder in the right conditions.

This native beauty calls the lower 48 states home, with populations thriving across a impressive range that includes Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia.

Why Grow Carolina Canarygrass?

Here’s where this grass really shines: it’s classified as a facultative wetland plant across all regions of the United States. This means it usually occurs in wetlands but can also handle drier conditions when needed. Talk about adaptability!

Perfect for These Garden Situations

  • Rain gardens and bioswales
  • Pond edges and stream banks
  • Prairie and meadow restorations
  • Naturalized landscape areas
  • Erosion control on slopes
  • Wildlife habitat gardens

What to Expect

Carolina canarygrass typically grows 1-3 feet tall with narrow, grass-like leaves and compact seed heads. As an annual, it won’t stick around year after year as the same plant, but it’s quite good at dropping seeds for next year’s show. The plant has a relatively fast growth rate and can fill in areas quickly during the growing season.

Growing Conditions

This grass is refreshingly easy-going about its growing conditions:

  • Light: Full sun to partial shade
  • Soil: Moist to wet soils, tolerates seasonal flooding
  • Hardiness: USDA zones 6-10
  • Water: Consistent moisture preferred, excellent drought tolerance once established

Planting and Care Tips

The beauty of native annuals like Carolina canarygrass is their low-maintenance nature:

  • Direct seed in fall or early spring when soil temperatures are cool
  • Scatter seeds on prepared soil surface – light coverage is fine
  • Keep soil consistently moist during germination
  • Once established, minimal care is needed
  • Allow plants to go to seed naturally for next year’s crop

Wildlife and Ecological Benefits

While Carolina canarygrass is wind-pollinated and doesn’t directly attract pollinators like flowering plants do, it plays an important role in the ecosystem. The grass provides structure and habitat for beneficial insects, and its seeds can be a food source for various wildlife species. In wetland areas, it helps with erosion control and water filtration.

Is This Grass Right for Your Garden?

Carolina canarygrass is an excellent choice if you’re looking to support native ecosystems, need erosion control in wet areas, or want to add authentic native character to prairie or meadow plantings. It’s not the grass for formal lawns or high-traffic areas, but it’s perfect for naturalized spaces where you want reliable, low-maintenance ground cover.

Since it’s an annual, don’t expect it to form permanent clumps like perennial grasses. Instead, think of it as nature’s way of filling in the gaps and providing quick cover while longer-lived plants get established.

The Bottom Line

Carolina canarygrass might not win any beauty contests, but it’s a dependable native that earns its keep through adaptability and ecological value. If you’ve got wet spots to fill, erosion to control, or simply want to support native plant communities, this humble grass deserves a spot in your landscape toolkit.

Wetland Status

The rule of seasoned gardeners and landscapers is to choose the "right plant for the right place" matching plants to their ideal growing conditions, so they'll thrive with less work and fewer inputs. But the simplicity of this catchphrase conceals how tricky plant selection is. While tags list watering requirements, there's more to the story.

Knowing a plant's wetland status can simplify the process by revealing the interaction between plants, water, and soil. Surprisingly, many popular landscape plants are wetland species! And what may be a wetland plant in one area, in another it might thrive in drier conditions. Also, it helps you make smarter gardening choices and grow healthy plants with less care and feeding, saving you time, frustration, and money while producing an attractive garden with greater ecological benefits.

Regions
Status
Moisture Conditions

Arid West

FACW

Facultative Wetland - Plants with this status usually occurs in wetlands but may occur in non-wetlands

Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain

FACW

Facultative Wetland - Plants with this status usually occurs in wetlands but may occur in non-wetlands

Eastern Mountains and Piedmont

FACW

Facultative Wetland - Plants with this status usually occurs in wetlands but may occur in non-wetlands

Great Plains

FACW

Facultative Wetland - Plants with this status usually occurs in wetlands but may occur in non-wetlands

Midwest

FACW

Facultative Wetland - Plants with this status usually occurs in wetlands but may occur in non-wetlands

Western Mountains, Valleys, and Coast

FACW

Facultative Wetland - Plants with this status usually occurs in wetlands but may occur in non-wetlands

Carolina Canarygrass

Classification

Group

Monocot

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision

Spermatophyta - Seed plants

Division

Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants

Subdivision
Class

Liliopsida - Monocotyledons

Subclass

Commelinidae

Order

Cyperales

Family

Poaceae Barnhart - Grass family

Genus

Phalaris L. - canarygrass

Species

Phalaris caroliniana Walter - Carolina canarygrass

Plant data source: USDA, NRCS 2025. The PLANTS Database. https://plants.usda.gov,. 2/25/2025. National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC USA