North America Native Plant

Clustered Mille Graines

Botanical name: Oldenlandia uniflora

USDA symbol: OLUN

Life cycle: annual

Habit: subshrub

Native status: Native to the lower 48 states âš˜ Native to Puerto Rico  

Synonyms: Hedyotis fasciculata Bertol. (HEFA7)  âš˜  Hedyotis uniflora (L.) Lam. (HEUN5)  âš˜  Hedyotis uniflora (L.) Lam. var. fasciculata (Bertol.) W.H. Lewis (HEUNF)  âš˜  Oldenlandia fasciculata (Bertol.) Small (OLFA)   

Clustered Mille Graines: A Delicate Native Ground Cover for Wet Areas If you’re looking for a charming native ground cover that thrives in moist conditions, clustered mille graines (Oldenlandia uniflora) might just be the hidden gem your garden needs. This petite annual herb brings delicate beauty to wetland areas and ...

Clustered Mille Graines: A Delicate Native Ground Cover for Wet Areas

If you’re looking for a charming native ground cover that thrives in moist conditions, clustered mille graines (Oldenlandia uniflora) might just be the hidden gem your garden needs. This petite annual herb brings delicate beauty to wetland areas and naturalized spaces, though it’s admittedly not the showiest plant in the native garden world.

What Is Clustered Mille Graines?

Clustered mille graines is a small annual forb—essentially a soft-stemmed flowering plant without woody tissue. As its scientific name Oldenlandia uniflora suggests, this little plant has a unified, simple charm that gardeners either fall in love with or completely overlook. You might also encounter it listed under several synonyms in older gardening references, including Hedyotis uniflora and Oldenlandia fasciculata.

Where It Calls Home

This native beauty has quite an impressive range across the southeastern United States and Puerto Rico. You’ll find clustered mille graines naturally occurring from New York down to Florida, west to Texas and Oklahoma, and throughout much of the southeastern coastal states including Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia, plus the District of Columbia.

The Wetland Connection

Here’s where clustered mille graines really shines: it’s classified as a Facultative Wetland plant across all regions where it grows. This means it usually prefers wet feet but won’t throw a tantrum if conditions aren’t constantly soggy. This adaptability makes it perfect for those tricky spots in your garden where water tends to collect or where you’re trying to create a rain garden.

Garden Appeal and Design Role

Let’s be honest—clustered mille graines isn’t going to stop traffic with bold, showy blooms. Instead, it offers subtle charm with tiny white flowers and fine-textured foliage that creates a delicate carpet effect. Think of it as nature’s lace doily rather than its bold statement necklace.

This plant works beautifully in:

  • Native plant gardens focused on local ecosystems
  • Rain gardens and bioswales
  • Wetland margins and pond edges
  • Naturalized areas where you want gentle ground coverage
  • Wildlife habitat gardens

Growing Conditions and Care

Based on its natural habitat and wetland status, clustered mille graines thrives in consistently moist to wet soils. It can handle both partial shade and full sun conditions, making it quite versatile for different garden situations. The plant is likely hardy in USDA zones 7-10, covering most of its native range.

Since it’s an annual, you’ll need to allow it to self-seed for continued presence in your garden, or collect seeds for replanting. The low-maintenance nature of this plant means once you’ve got it established in suitable conditions, it pretty much takes care of itself.

Should You Plant Clustered Mille Graines?

The decision comes down to your garden goals and aesthetic preferences. Choose clustered mille graines if you:

  • Have wet or consistently moist areas that need coverage
  • Appreciate subtle, naturalistic beauty over bold displays
  • Want to support local ecosystems with truly native plants
  • Enjoy low-maintenance gardening approaches
  • Are creating habitat for small beneficial insects

However, you might want to look elsewhere if you’re seeking:

  • Eye-catching focal points or dramatic garden statements
  • Plants for dry, well-drained areas
  • Perennial structure that returns reliably each year
  • Large, showy flowers for cutting gardens

The Bottom Line

Clustered mille graines represents the quieter side of native gardening—plants that may not grab headlines but play important ecological roles. While we’d love to share more specific details about its wildlife benefits and propagation methods, sometimes the most rewarding garden discoveries come from experimenting with these lesser-known natives yourself.

If you have the right conditions (think moist and sunny to partly shaded), this delicate annual could add authentic local character to your landscape. Just remember that with annuals, patience and observation are key to understanding how they’ll behave in your specific garden conditions.

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

Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain

FACW

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

Caribbean

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

Northcentral & Northeast

FACW

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

Clustered Mille Graines

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

Rubiales

Family

Rubiaceae Juss. - Madder family

Genus

Oldenlandia L. - oldenlandia

Species

Oldenlandia uniflora L. - clustered mille graines

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