North America Native Plant

Cliffdweller’s Cryptantha

Botanical name: Cryptantha elata

USDA symbol: CREL4

Life cycle: biennial

Habit: subshrub

Native status: Native to the lower 48 states  

Synonyms: Oreocarya elata Eastw. (OREL2)   

Cliffdweller’s Cryptantha: A Rare Rocky Mountain Native Worth Protecting Meet cliffdweller’s cryptantha (Cryptantha elata), a charming yet vulnerable native wildflower that calls the high country of Colorado and Utah home. This unassuming member of the borage family might not be the showiest plant in your garden, but it carries the ...

Rare plant alert!

Region: Conservation status by state

Status: S3: Status is uncertain but is somewhere between the following rankings: Vulnerable: Either very rare and local throughout its range, found only in a restricted range (even if abundant at some locations), or factors are making it vulnerable to extinction. Typically 21 to 100 occurrences or between 3,000 and 10,000 individuals ⚘

Cliffdweller’s Cryptantha: A Rare Rocky Mountain Native Worth Protecting

Meet cliffdweller’s cryptantha (Cryptantha elata), a charming yet vulnerable native wildflower that calls the high country of Colorado and Utah home. This unassuming member of the borage family might not be the showiest plant in your garden, but it carries the unique distinction of being perfectly adapted to some of North America’s most challenging mountain environments.

What Makes This Plant Special

Cliffdweller’s cryptantha is a biennial to short-lived perennial forb that embodies the rugged beauty of the American West. Also known by its former scientific name Oreocarya elata, this hardy little plant produces clusters of tiny white flowers that may seem modest at first glance, but play an important role in high-elevation ecosystems.

As a non-woody herbaceous plant, it maintains a low profile while developing deep roots that help it survive in rocky, well-draining soils where few other plants can thrive. The silvery-green foliage and delicate flower clusters create a subtle beauty that’s perfectly at home among boulders and cliff faces.

Where You’ll Find It Growing Wild

This native beauty has a limited natural range, occurring only in Colorado and Utah. It’s specifically adapted to high-elevation environments in the Rocky Mountain region, where it grows in rocky outcrops, cliff faces, and well-draining mountain slopes.

Important Conservation Considerations

Before you rush to add cliffdweller’s cryptantha to your garden, there’s something crucial you need to know: this plant has a Global Conservation Status of S3, meaning it’s considered vulnerable. With only an estimated 21 to 100 occurrences and between 3,000 to 10,000 individuals remaining in the wild, every plant matters.

If you’re determined to grow this rare beauty, please ensure you source it only from reputable native plant nurseries that propagate their own stock rather than collecting from wild populations. Better yet, consider supporting conservation efforts for this species instead.

Garden Suitability and Design Role

Cliffdweller’s cryptantha isn’t your typical garden center find, and honestly, that’s probably for the best given its conservation status. However, for specialized native plant enthusiasts with the right growing conditions, it can serve as:

  • A conversation starter in alpine rock gardens
  • An educational specimen in native plant collections
  • A component of high-elevation restoration projects
  • A unique addition to xerophytic (drought-adapted) garden designs

Growing Conditions and Care

This mountain native has very specific requirements that can be challenging to replicate in typical garden settings:

Sunlight: Full sun exposure

Soil: Extremely well-draining, rocky or sandy soils that mimic its natural cliff-dwelling habitat

Water: Minimal watering once established; this plant despises soggy conditions

Climate: Adapted to USDA hardiness zones 4-7, but specifically thrives in high-elevation conditions with significant temperature fluctuations

Pollinator and Wildlife Benefits

While small, the white flower clusters of cliffdweller’s cryptantha provide nectar for native bees and other small pollinators that share its high-elevation habitat. These relationships have evolved over thousands of years and are part of what makes this plant so ecologically valuable in its native range.

The Bottom Line

Cliffdweller’s cryptantha is undeniably fascinating, but it’s not a plant most gardeners should attempt to grow. Its vulnerable conservation status, highly specific growing requirements, and limited availability make it better suited for conservation efforts than home gardens.

If you’re drawn to the idea of growing rare Rocky Mountain natives, consider more common alternatives like penstemon species, native lupines, or other regionally appropriate wildflowers that can provide similar aesthetic appeal without the conservation concerns.

Sometimes the best way to appreciate a rare plant is to protect it in its natural habitat rather than trying to bring it home. Cliffdweller’s cryptantha is definitely one of those special plants that’s best admired from afar while we work to ensure its survival for future generations.

Cliffdweller’s Cryptantha

Classification

Group

Dicot

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision

Spermatophyta - Seed plants

Division

Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants

Subdivision
Class

Magnoliopsida - Dicotyledons

Subclass

Asteridae

Order

Lamiales

Family

Boraginaceae Juss. - Borage family

Genus

Cryptantha Lehm. ex G. Don - cryptantha

Species

Cryptantha elata (Eastw.) Payson - cliffdweller's cryptantha

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