North America Native Plant

Deer Fern

Botanical name: Blechnum spicant

USDA symbol: BLSP

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: forb

Native status: Native to Alaska ⚘ Native to Canada ⚘ Native to the lower 48 states  

Synonyms: Blechnum spicant (L.) Sm. var. elongatum (Hook.) B. Boivin (BLSPE)  ⚘  Blechnum spicant (L.) Sm. ssp. nipponicum auct. non (Kunze) Á. Löve & D. Löve (BLSPN)  ⚘  Lomaria spicant (L.) Desv. (LOSP4)  ⚘  Osmunda spicant L. (OSSP)  ⚘  Struthiopteris spicant (L.) Weiss (STSP9)   

Deer Fern: A Pacific Northwest Native That’s Perfect for Shady Spots If you’re looking to add some evergreen elegance to your shade garden, meet the deer fern (Blechnum spicant) – a Pacific Northwest native that’s been quietly beautifying forest floors for centuries. This charming fern might not have the flashiest ...

Deer Fern: A Pacific Northwest Native That’s Perfect for Shady Spots

If you’re looking to add some evergreen elegance to your shade garden, meet the deer fern (Blechnum spicant) – a Pacific Northwest native that’s been quietly beautifying forest floors for centuries. This charming fern might not have the flashiest name, but it’s got personality in spades and some pretty neat tricks up its fronds.

What Makes Deer Fern Special?

Deer fern is what botanists call a dimorphic fern, which is just a fancy way of saying it has two different types of fronds that look like they belong to different plants entirely. The sterile fronds (the ones that don’t produce spores) stay low and spread outward, creating a lovely evergreen carpet that reaches about 1-2 feet tall. Meanwhile, the fertile fronds shoot straight up like little green soldiers, reaching heights of up to 3.5 feet and bearing the plant’s spores.

This dual personality makes deer fern incredibly distinctive – once you know what to look for, you’ll spot it everywhere in Pacific Northwest forests.

Where You’ll Find This Pacific Beauty

Deer fern is a true Pacific Northwest native, calling home to a impressive range that stretches from Alaska down through British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and into Northern California. You’ll also find it inland in Idaho, where it thrives in the cooler, moister mountain regions.

Why Your Shade Garden Will Love Deer Fern

This perennial fern is like that reliable friend who’s always there when you need them. Here’s why deer fern deserves a spot in your garden:

  • Year-round beauty: Those dark green fronds stay put through winter, providing structure and color when most other plants have called it quits
  • Low maintenance: Once established, deer fern is remarkably self-sufficient
  • Versatile placement: Works beautifully as groundcover, in woodland gardens, or as a textural accent in shaded borders
  • Native plant benefits: Supports local ecosystems and is adapted to regional growing conditions

Perfect Garden Settings

Deer fern absolutely shines in woodland gardens and naturalistic shade plantings. It’s particularly at home in Pacific Northwest native plant gardens, where it can mingle with other regional favorites like Oregon grape, salal, and Western red cedar. The fern also works wonderfully in rain gardens, thanks to its facultative wetland status – meaning it’s happy in both moist and moderately dry conditions.

Consider using deer fern as a living mulch under taller shrubs, or plant it in drifts for a more dramatic effect. Its moderate growth rate means it won’t overwhelm smaller companions, but it will steadily fill in gaps over time.

Growing Conditions That Make Deer Fern Happy

Like most Pacific Northwest natives, deer fern has some specific preferences, but they’re not too demanding once you understand what it wants:

  • Light: Partial to full shade (intermediate shade tolerance)
  • Soil: Medium-textured, well-draining soil with high fertility requirements
  • pH: Slightly acidic to neutral (5.5-7.0)
  • Moisture: High moisture use – keep it consistently moist but not waterlogged
  • Climate: Hardy in USDA zones 5-9, needs at least 160 frost-free days
  • Precipitation: Thrives with 30-60 inches of annual rainfall

Planting and Care Tips

Getting deer fern established in your garden is pretty straightforward:

  • Planting: Available primarily through specialty native plant nurseries (contracting only commercial availability)
  • Spacing: Plant 1,200-1,700 per acre, or about 3-4 feet apart for garden settings
  • Establishment: Water regularly during the first growing season to help roots establish
  • Maintenance: Remove old, damaged fronds in late winter before new growth emerges
  • Propagation: Can be propagated by container or sprigs; spreads naturally at a moderate rate through rhizomes

A Few Things to Keep in Mind

Deer fern isn’t the right choice for every garden situation. It has no drought tolerance whatsoever, so if you’re gardening in a dry climate or dealing with summer water restrictions, this might not be your fern. It also needs that higher fertility soil and consistent moisture to really thrive.

Additionally, while deer fern won’t attract pollinators (it’s a spore-producing fern, after all), it does provide habitat and cover for various woodland creatures – though specific wildlife benefits aren’t well-documented.

The Bottom Line

Deer fern is a fantastic choice for Pacific Northwest gardeners looking to create authentic woodland gardens or add year-round structure to shady areas. Its unique dimorphic fronds, evergreen nature, and native status make it a winner for environmentally conscious gardeners who want something a little different from the usual hosta-and-astilbe combination.

Just remember: this is a fern that likes its feet wet and its head in the shade. Give it those conditions, and you’ll have a reliable, attractive groundcover that connects your garden to the broader Pacific Northwest landscape.

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

Alaska

FAC

Facultative - Plants with this status can occur in wetlands and non-wetlands

Arid West

FAC

Facultative - Plants with this status can occur in wetlands and non-wetlands

Western Mountains, Valleys, and Coast

FAC

Facultative - Plants with this status can occur in wetlands and non-wetlands

Deer Fern

Classification

Group

Fern

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision
Division

Pteridophyta - Ferns

Subdivision
Class

Filicopsida

Subclass
Order

Polypodiales

Family

Blechnaceae Newman - Chain Fern family

Genus

Blechnum L. - midsorus fern

Species

Blechnum spicant (L.) Sm. - deer fern

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