North America Native Plant

Disk Waterhyssop

Botanical name: Bacopa rotundifolia

USDA symbol: BARO

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: forb

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

Synonyms: Bacopa nobsiana H. Mason (BANO)  âš˜  Bacopa simulans Fernald (BASI2)  âš˜  Bramia rotundifolia (Michx.) Britton (BRRO4)  âš˜  Hydranthelium rotundifolium (Michx.) Pennell (HYRO3)  âš˜  Macuillamia rotundifolia (Michx.) Raf. (MARO4)   

Disk Waterhyssop: A Tiny Native Gem for Wet Spots in Your Garden If you’ve ever struggled with those perpetually soggy areas in your yard, meet your new best friend: disk waterhyssop (Bacopa rotundifolia). This charming little native perennial might just be the perfect solution for those challenging wet spots that ...

Disk Waterhyssop: A Tiny Native Gem for Wet Spots in Your Garden

If you’ve ever struggled with those perpetually soggy areas in your yard, meet your new best friend: disk waterhyssop (Bacopa rotundifolia). This charming little native perennial might just be the perfect solution for those challenging wet spots that leave most gardeners scratching their heads.

What Exactly Is Disk Waterhyssop?

Disk waterhyssop is a low-growing, mat-forming perennial that’s as tough as it is cute. This native North American plant creates a dense carpet of small, round leaves topped with tiny white flowers during its blooming season in fall. At just 0.1 feet tall (yes, you read that right – we’re talking about a truly petite plant!), it spreads slowly via stolons to form attractive groundcover colonies.

You might also encounter this plant under several historical names in older gardening references, including Bacopa nobsiana, Bacopa simulans, or Bramia rotundifolia, but they’re all the same delightful species.

Where Does It Call Home?

This versatile native has an impressive range, naturally occurring across 29 states and parts of Canada. You’ll find it thriving everywhere from Alberta down to Texas, and from California to North Carolina. It’s particularly well-adapted to conditions in the Great Plains, Midwest, and various other regions across North America.

Why Your Garden (and Local Wildlife) Will Love It

Here’s where disk waterhyssop really shines – it’s classified as an obligate wetland plant across all regions, meaning it absolutely loves those marshy, constantly moist conditions that make most other plants throw in the towel. If you have:

  • Boggy areas that never seem to dry out
  • Pond or stream edges
  • Rain gardens or bioswales
  • Natural wetland areas you want to restore

Then this little charmer is practically begging to be planted! Its dense summer foliage provides excellent ground coverage, and while it may be small, those white flowers are surprisingly conspicuous and add a delicate beauty to wet landscapes.

Growing Conditions: It’s All About the Water

Disk waterhyssop is refreshingly honest about its needs – it wants water, lots of it, and it wants it consistently. Here’s what makes this plant happiest:

  • Moisture: High water needs – think constantly moist to wet soil
  • Soil: Adapts well to fine and medium-textured soils
  • pH: Tolerates a range from 5.4 to 7.8
  • Sun: Shade intolerant – needs full sun for best performance
  • Hardiness: Hardy to approximately USDA zones 3-9 (tolerates temperatures down to -33°F)
  • Drainage: High anaerobic tolerance – can handle waterlogged conditions

One thing to note: this plant has zero drought tolerance, so don’t even think about planting it in that dry, sandy spot. It’s also not salt-tolerant, so keep it away from areas treated with road salt.

Planting and Care Tips

The good news? Once you get disk waterhyssop established in the right conditions, it’s fairly low-maintenance. Here’s how to set it up for success:

  • Timing: Plant in spring after the last frost – it needs at least 120 frost-free days
  • Spacing: Plan for 2,700 to 11,000 plants per acre, depending on how quickly you want coverage
  • Propagation: Can be grown from seed (about 4 million seeds per pound!), bare root, or container plants
  • Growth rate: Be patient – it has a slow growth rate and low seedling vigor
  • Fertilizer: Has low fertility requirements – often unnecessary in rich, wet soils

The plant spreads at a moderate rate vegetatively, so give it time to establish its colony. Its active growing period spans spring through fall, with blooming occurring in the fall months.

Perfect Garden Roles

This prostrate, stoloniferous grower excels as:

  • Groundcover for perpetually wet areas
  • Erosion control on pond or stream banks
  • Living mulch in rain gardens
  • Naturalistic plantings in constructed wetlands
  • Filler between larger wetland plants

A Few Considerations

While disk waterhyssop is a wonderful native choice, it’s not currently widely available commercially, so you may need to do some hunting to find plants or seeds. Additionally, remember that this plant is truly committed to wet conditions – there’s no compromise here. If your site occasionally dries out, this isn’t your plant.

For gardeners looking to support native ecosystems while solving challenging wet-site problems, disk waterhyssop offers a unique combination of beauty, functionality, and authentic regional character. It may be small in stature, but it’s mighty in its ability to transform problem areas into thriving, naturalistic landscapes.

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

OBL

Obligate Wetland - Plants with this status almost always occurs in wetlands

Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain

OBL

Obligate Wetland - Plants with this status almost always occurs in wetlands

Eastern Mountains and Piedmont

OBL

Obligate Wetland - Plants with this status almost always occurs in wetlands

Great Plains

OBL

Obligate Wetland - Plants with this status almost always occurs in wetlands

Midwest

OBL

Obligate Wetland - Plants with this status almost always occurs in wetlands

Northcentral & Northeast

OBL

Obligate Wetland - Plants with this status almost always occurs in wetlands

Western Mountains, Valleys, and Coast

OBL

Obligate Wetland - Plants with this status almost always occurs in wetlands

Disk Waterhyssop

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

Scrophulariales

Family

Scrophulariaceae Juss. - Figwort family

Genus

Bacopa Aubl. - waterhyssop

Species

Bacopa rotundifolia (Michx.) Wettst. - disk waterhyssop

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