North America Native Plant

Common Dandelion

Botanical name: Taraxacum officinale ceratophorum

USDA symbol: TAOFC

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: forb

Native status: Native to Alaska âš˜ Native to Canada âš˜ Native to Greenland âš˜ Native to the lower 48 states  

Synonyms: Taraxacum ambigens Fernald (TAAM2)  âš˜  Taraxacum amphiphron Böcher (TAAM3)  âš˜  Taraxacum ambigens Fernald var. flutius (TAAMF)  âš˜  Taraxacum arctogenum Dahlst. (TAAR4)  âš˜  Taraxacum brachyceras Dahlst. (TABR4)  âš˜  Taraxacum carthamopsis A.E. Porsild (TACA10)  âš˜  Taraxacum ceratophorum (Ledeb.) DC. (TACE)  âš˜  Taraxacum dumetorum Greene (TADU)  âš˜  Taraxacum eurylepium Dahlst. (TAEU)  âš˜  Taraxacum hyperboreum Dahlst. (TAHY2)  âš˜  Taraxacum integratum G.E. Haglund (TAIN3)  âš˜  Taraxacum lacerum Greene (TALA)  âš˜  Taraxacum lapponicum Kihlm. ex Hand.-Maz. (TALA4)  âš˜  Taraxacum laurentianum Fernald (TALA6)  âš˜  Taraxacum latispinulosum M.P. Christ. (TALA7)  âš˜  Taraxacum longii Fernald (TALO2)  âš˜  Taraxacum malteanum Dahlst. (TAMA5)  âš˜  Taraxacum maurolepium G.E. Haglund (TAMA6)  âš˜  Taraxacum mitratum G.E. Haglund (TAMI4)  âš˜  Taraxacum multesimum G.E. Haglund (TAMU2)  âš˜  Taraxacum naevosum Dahlst. (TANA)  âš˜  Taraxacum ovinum Rydb. (TAOV)  âš˜  Taraxacum paucisquamosum M. Peck (TAPA7)  âš˜  Taraxacum pellianum A.E. Porsild (TAPE3)  âš˜  Taraxacum pseudonorvegicum Dahlst. (TAPS)  âš˜  Taraxacum purpuridens Dahlst. (TAPU2)  âš˜  Taraxacum torngatense Fernald (TATO)  âš˜  Taraxacum trigonolobum Dahlst. (TATR)  âš˜  Taraxacum umbrinum Dahlst. (TAUM)   

Growing Common Dandelion: A Native Wildflower Worth Knowing When most people hear dandelion, they think of the familiar yellow weeds dotting suburban lawns. But there’s a lesser-known native cousin that deserves a spot in your wildflower garden: Taraxacum officinale ceratophorum, commonly known as the common dandelion or horned dandelion. This ...

Rare plant alert!

Region: Conservation status by state

Status: S1Q: Status is uncertain but is somewhere between the following rankings: Uncertain taxonomy: ⚘ Critically Imperiled: Extremely rare due to factor(s) making it especially vulnerable to extinction. Typically 5 or fewer occurrences or very few remaining individuals (<1,000) ⚘ Uncertain taxonomy: ⚘ Imperiled: Extremely rare due to factor(s) making it especially vulnerable to extinction. Typically 6 to 20 occurrences or few remaining individuals (1,000 to 3,000) ⚘

Region: Conservation status by state

Growing Common Dandelion: A Native Wildflower Worth Knowing

When most people hear dandelion, they think of the familiar yellow weeds dotting suburban lawns. But there’s a lesser-known native cousin that deserves a spot in your wildflower garden: Taraxacum officinale ceratophorum, commonly known as the common dandelion or horned dandelion. This hardy perennial offers the cheerful blooms we love while supporting native ecosystems across North America.

Where You’ll Find This Native Beauty

Unlike its weedy European relatives, this native dandelion calls North America home. It’s naturally found across an impressive range, from the Arctic reaches of Alaska and northern Canada down through Greenland and into the lower 48 states. You can spot it growing wild in states and provinces including Alberta, British Columbia, Alaska, Manitoba, California, Ontario, Colorado, Quebec, Saskatchewan, Idaho, Maine, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming, plus the territories of Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut.

A Word About Rarity

Here’s something important to know: this native dandelion has uncertain conservation status in some areas, with rankings of S1Q and S2Q in certain regions. This means we should be thoughtful about how we grow it. If you’re interested in adding this plant to your garden, make sure to source it responsibly from reputable native plant nurseries rather than collecting from wild populations.

What Makes This Dandelion Special

As a perennial forb, this native dandelion forms attractive rosettes of deeply lobed leaves topped with cheerful yellow composite flowers. It’s a compact, low-growing plant that won’t take over your garden like some of its more aggressive cousins. The flowers appear in spring and provide crucial early-season nectar for pollinators emerging from winter.

Perfect Spots for Planting

This adaptable native thrives in several garden settings:

  • Native plant gardens and naturalized areas
  • Rock gardens and alpine collections
  • Wildflower meadows
  • Low-maintenance landscape borders

Growing Conditions That Make It Happy

One of the best things about this native dandelion is how easy-going it is. Here’s what it prefers:

  • Sunlight: Full sun for best flowering
  • Soil: Well-draining soils, but tolerates poor conditions
  • Water: Drought tolerant once established
  • Climate: Hardy in USDA zones 1-7, perfect for northern gardens

Wetland Tolerance Varies by Region

Interestingly, this plant’s relationship with moisture changes depending on where you live. In Alaska, the Arid West, and Great Plains regions, it’s classified as Obligate Upland, meaning it almost never occurs in wetlands. However, in the Northcentral and Northeast regions, it’s more flexible and can handle both wet and dry conditions. In Western Mountains and coastal areas, it usually prefers drier sites but can occasionally tolerate some moisture.

Caring for Your Native Dandelion

Once established, this native requires minimal care:

  • Water regularly the first season to help establish roots
  • After that, it’s quite drought tolerant
  • No need for fertilizer – it actually prefers lean soils
  • Deadhead spent flowers if you want to prevent self-seeding
  • Allow some flowers to go to seed to feed birds and maintain the population

Supporting Pollinators and Wildlife

Like other dandelions, this native species provides valuable early-season nectar when few other flowers are available. Bees, butterflies, and other pollinators depend on these bright yellow blooms to fuel up after winter. The seeds also provide food for birds, while the leaves may serve as browse for various wildlife species.

Should You Plant It?

If you’re creating a native plant garden or want to support local pollinators with truly indigenous species, this native dandelion is worth considering – but with an important caveat. Due to its uncertain conservation status in some areas, only plant specimens that have been responsibly propagated by reputable nurseries. Never collect plants from the wild.

This charming native offers the familiar appeal of dandelion flowers while supporting the ecosystems they evolved with. In the right garden setting and with responsible sourcing, Taraxacum officinale ceratophorum can be a wonderful addition to your native plant collection.

Common Dandelion

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

Asterales

Family

Asteraceae Bercht. & J. Presl - Aster family

Genus

Taraxacum F.H. Wigg. - dandelion

Species

Taraxacum officinale F.H. Wigg. - common dandelion

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