North America Native Plant

Sanddune Wallflower

Botanical name: Erysimum capitatum var. capitatum

USDA symbol: ERCAC

Life cycle: biennial

Habit: forb

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

Synonyms: Erysimum arkansanum Nutt. (ERAR26)  âš˜  Erysimum asperum (Nutt.) DC. var. arkansanum (Nutt.) A. Gray (ERASA2)  âš˜  Erysimum asperum (Nutt.) DC. var. capitatum (Douglas ex Hook.) B. Boivin (ERASC)  âš˜  Erysimum capitatum (Douglas ex Hook.) Greene var. stellatum (J.T. Howell) Twisselmann (ERCAS)  âš˜  Erysimum capitatum (Douglas ex Hook.) Greene var. washoense G. Rossb. (ERCAW)  âš˜  Erysimum elatum Nutt. (EREL12)  âš˜  Erysimum moniliforme Eastw. (ERMO10)  âš˜  Erysimum wheeleri Rothr. (ERWH2)   

Sanddune Wallflower: A Cheerful Native Wildflower for Your Garden If you’re looking for a bright, cheerful addition to your native plant garden, the sanddune wallflower might just be the perfect candidate. This delightful member of the mustard family brings sunny yellow blooms and hardy resilience to landscapes across much of ...

Rare plant alert!

Region: Arkansas

Status: S2: Status is uncertain but is somewhere between the following rankings: 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) ⚘

Sanddune Wallflower: A Cheerful Native Wildflower for Your Garden

If you’re looking for a bright, cheerful addition to your native plant garden, the sanddune wallflower might just be the perfect candidate. This delightful member of the mustard family brings sunny yellow blooms and hardy resilience to landscapes across much of North America. But before you rush to plant it everywhere, there are a few important things every responsible gardener should know.

Meet the Sanddune Wallflower

Scientifically known as Erysimum capitatum var. capitatum, the sanddune wallflower is a native forb that’s been brightening up the American landscape long before European settlers arrived. This isn’t your typical garden flower – it’s a true native with deep roots in the ecosystem and a personality all its own.

Where Does It Call Home?

The sanddune wallflower has an impressively wide native range, spanning from Alaska all the way down to states like Arkansas, Texas, and California. You’ll find it naturally occurring in Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.

Important Note About Rarity: While this plant has a broad range, it’s considered rare in some areas. In Arkansas, for example, it has an S2 rarity status, meaning it’s imperiled in that state. If you live in an area where sanddune wallflower is rare, please only plant specimens from responsible, ethical sources – never collect from wild populations.

What Makes It Garden-Worthy?

The sanddune wallflower brings several appealing qualities to your landscape:

  • Bright yellow flowers that are quite conspicuous during the blooming period
  • Manageable size – reaches about 2.5 feet tall at maturity
  • Rapid growth rate once established
  • Fine-textured green foliage that complements other native plants
  • Spring and summer active growth when you want the most garden action

The Perfect Garden Fit

This wallflower works beautifully in:

  • Native plant gardens
  • Wildflower meadows
  • Xeriscapes and drought-tolerant landscapes
  • Prairie restorations
  • Natural-style borders

With its erect, single-crown growth form and conspicuous mid-spring blooms, sanddune wallflower serves as an excellent mid-height accent plant that won’t overwhelm smaller companions.

Growing Conditions That Make It Happy

One of the best things about sanddune wallflower is that it’s not particularly fussy, but it does have some preferences:

Soil: Thrives in coarse to medium-textured soils but struggles in heavy clay. It prefers well-draining conditions and can handle pH levels from 6.0 to 8.5.

Water: Medium drought tolerance means it can handle dry spells once established, but benefits from occasional watering during extended dry periods. Annual precipitation needs range from 12-30 inches.

Sun: This plant is shade intolerant, so give it full sun for best performance.

Temperature: Quite cold hardy, tolerating temperatures down to -28°F. Needs at least 120 frost-free days to complete its growth cycle.

Planting and Care Tips

Propagation: Sanddune wallflower is primarily grown from seed, with about 373,000 seeds per pound. Seeds have medium abundance and moderate spread rate.

When to Plant: Since it blooms in mid-spring, plant seeds in fall or early spring for best results.

Care: This low-maintenance native requires minimal fertility – in fact, it prefers low-fertility soils. Once established, it has a relatively short lifespan but may self-seed under the right conditions.

What to Expect: Your sanddune wallflower will grow rapidly in spring, produce those cheerful yellow flowers in mid-spring, and set brown seeds during the summer months. The plant typically lives as either a biennial or short-lived perennial.

A Word of Caution About Sourcing

While sanddune wallflower isn’t listed as invasive or noxious, its rarity status in some states means responsible sourcing is crucial. Always purchase from reputable native plant nurseries that can guarantee their stock wasn’t collected from wild populations. This protects natural ecosystems while still allowing you to enjoy this beautiful native in your garden.

The Bottom Line

Sanddune wallflower offers native plant gardeners a lovely, low-maintenance option for adding spring color to sunny, well-draining sites. Its wide native range means it’s likely adapted to your local conditions, and its cheerful yellow blooms provide a bright spot in any native landscape. Just remember to source responsibly and give it the full sun and good drainage it craves.

Whether you’re creating a prairie garden, establishing a native border, or simply want to support local ecosystems with appropriate native plants, the sanddune wallflower deserves a spot on your consideration list – as long as you can source it ethically.

Sanddune Wallflower

Classification

Group

Dicot

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision

Spermatophyta - Seed plants

Division

Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants

Subdivision
Class

Magnoliopsida - Dicotyledons

Subclass

Dilleniidae

Order

Capparales

Family

Brassicaceae Burnett - Mustard family

Genus

Erysimum L. - wallflower

Species

Erysimum capitatum (Douglas ex Hook.) Greene - sanddune wallflower

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