North America Native Plant

Serpentine Erigeron

Botanical name: Erigeron serpentinus

USDA symbol: ERSE8

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: forb

Native status: Native to the lower 48 states  

Serpentine Erigeron: A Rare California Native Worth Protecting If you’re drawn to unique native plants with specialized growing requirements, the serpentine erigeron (Erigeron serpentinus) might catch your attention. This delicate perennial fleabane is one of California’s botanical treasures, but before you start planning where to plant it, there’s something crucial ...

Rare plant alert!

Region: Conservation status by state

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) ⚘

Serpentine Erigeron: A Rare California Native Worth Protecting

If you’re drawn to unique native plants with specialized growing requirements, the serpentine erigeron (Erigeron serpentinus) might catch your attention. This delicate perennial fleabane is one of California’s botanical treasures, but before you start planning where to plant it, there’s something crucial you need to know about its conservation status.

A Rare Beauty with Important Conservation Concerns

Serpentine erigeron holds a Global Conservation Status of S2, meaning it’s imperiled in the wild. With only 6 to 20 known occurrences and fewer than 3,000 individuals remaining, this plant is extremely vulnerable to extinction. If you’re considering adding this species to your garden, please ensure you’re working with responsibly sourced material from reputable native plant nurseries that propagate rather than wild-collect their plants.

Where It Calls Home

This herbaceous perennial is endemic to California, where it has evolved to thrive in the state’s unique serpentine soils. These mineral-rich, often challenging growing conditions have shaped this plant’s specialized requirements and limited distribution.

What Makes It Special

As a member of the fleabane family, serpentine erigeron produces charming daisy-like flowers with white to pale pink petals surrounding bright yellow centers. This low-growing forb lacks significant woody tissue, making it a true herbaceous perennial that dies back to ground level each winter and reemerges in spring.

Garden Design and Landscape Role

Due to its specialized growing requirements and conservation status, serpentine erigeron is best suited for:

  • Specialized native plant gardens
  • Rock gardens with excellent drainage
  • Xerophytic (dry-adapted) plant collections
  • Educational or conservation-focused landscapes

This isn’t a plant for every garden, but for the right setting and dedicated gardener, it can be a meaningful addition to conservation efforts.

Growing Conditions and Care

Successfully growing serpentine erigeron requires mimicking its native serpentine soil environment:

  • Soil: Excellent drainage is critical; mineral-rich, low-fertility soils preferred
  • Sunlight: Full sun exposure
  • Water: Drought tolerant once established; minimal supplemental watering needed
  • Climate: Likely hardy in USDA zones 8-10, matching California’s Mediterranean climate

Planting and Care Tips

If you’ve obtained responsibly sourced plants or seeds:

  • Plant in well-draining soil amendments like pumice or decomposed granite
  • Avoid rich, organic soils that retain moisture
  • Water sparingly during establishment, then rely on natural rainfall
  • Mulch lightly with gravel or mineral mulch rather than organic materials
  • Allow the plant to go dormant naturally in winter

Benefits to Pollinators and Wildlife

Like other fleabanes, serpentine erigeron likely provides nectar and pollen for small native bees, beneficial insects, and possibly butterflies. Its flowers, though small, are part of the complex web of relationships that support California’s native ecosystems.

Should You Grow It?

This is a plant for dedicated native plant enthusiasts and conservation-minded gardeners who understand the responsibility that comes with growing rare species. If you have the right growing conditions and can source plants responsibly, growing serpentine erigeron can be part of conservation efforts to maintain genetic diversity outside of wild populations.

However, if you’re new to native gardening or looking for easy-care plants, consider starting with more common California natives like coyote brush, California poppies, or other Erigeron species that aren’t imperiled. There are many beautiful, readily available native alternatives that can provide similar aesthetic appeal without the conservation concerns.

Remember: every rare plant in cultivation represents hope for the future, but only when grown responsibly and with respect for wild populations.

Serpentine Erigeron

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

Erigeron L. - fleabane

Species

Erigeron serpentinus G.L. Nesom - serpentine erigeron

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