North America Native Plant

Whiteflower Cinquefoil

Botanical name: Potentilla albiflora

USDA symbol: POAL9

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: forb

Native status: Native to the lower 48 states  

Whiteflower Cinquefoil: A Rare Arizona Native That Requires Special Consideration If you’ve stumbled across information about whiteflower cinquefoil (Potentilla albiflora), you’ve discovered one of the botanical world’s best-kept secrets – and perhaps one of its most elusive plants. This rare Arizona native deserves a closer look, not because it’s readily ...

Rare plant alert!

Region: Conservation status by state

Status: S1S2: Status is uncertain but is somewhere between the following rankings: 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) ⚘ 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) ⚘

Whiteflower Cinquefoil: A Rare Arizona Native That Requires Special Consideration

If you’ve stumbled across information about whiteflower cinquefoil (Potentilla albiflora), you’ve discovered one of the botanical world’s best-kept secrets – and perhaps one of its most elusive plants. This rare Arizona native deserves a closer look, not because it’s readily available for your garden, but because understanding rare plants helps us appreciate the incredible diversity hiding in our wild spaces.

What Is Whiteflower Cinquefoil?

Whiteflower cinquefoil is a perennial forb – essentially a non-woody flowering plant that comes back year after year. Like other members of the rose family, it lacks the thick, woody stems you’d find on shrubs or trees, instead growing as a herbaceous plant with its growing points at or below ground level.

This native species calls the lower 48 states home, though its presence appears to be limited to Arizona. The plant’s common name hints at its most distinctive feature: white flowers that set it apart from its more common yellow-flowered cinquefoil cousins.

A Conservation Concern

Here’s where things get serious: whiteflower cinquefoil carries a Global Conservation Status of S1S2, indicating it’s somewhere between critically imperiled and imperiled. In plain English? This plant is extremely rare and potentially at risk of disappearing entirely.

Important: If you’re interested in this plant, please do not attempt to collect it from the wild or purchase it unless you can verify it comes from ethically sourced, propagated material. Given its rarity status, any garden use should only involve responsibly sourced plants that don’t impact wild populations.

Why This Plant Matters (Even If You Can’t Grow It)

While whiteflower cinquefoil might not be destined for your garden bed, rare plants like this one play crucial roles in their ecosystems. They often:

  • Provide specialized habitat for equally rare insects and wildlife
  • Represent unique genetic resources that could be important for conservation
  • Help us understand plant evolution and adaptation in specific environments
  • Serve as indicators of ecosystem health in their native habitats

Growing Considerations (If Ethically Sourced)

Unfortunately, detailed growing information for whiteflower cinquefoil is extremely limited due to its rarity. What we do know is that as an Arizona native, it’s likely adapted to:

  • Arid to semi-arid conditions
  • Well-draining soils
  • Temperature extremes typical of the Southwest
  • Limited water availability during certain seasons

However, without more specific habitat information, attempting to cultivate this rare species would be challenging and potentially unsuccessful.

Better Alternatives for Your Garden

If you’re drawn to the idea of growing cinquefoils, consider these more common and garden-appropriate native alternatives:

  • Shrubby cinquefoil (Dasiphora fruticosa) – widely available and pollinator-friendly
  • Sticky cinquefoil (Potentilla glandulosa) – another western native that’s easier to find
  • Other Arizona natives in the rose family that offer similar ecological benefits

Supporting Conservation

The best way to grow rare plants like whiteflower cinquefoil is to support their conservation in the wild. Consider:

  • Supporting organizations that work to protect Arizona’s native plant communities
  • Learning about and protecting native plant habitats in your area
  • Choosing common native plants for your garden to reduce pressure on rare species
  • Participating in citizen science projects that help track rare plant populations

While whiteflower cinquefoil might remain a mystery plant for most gardeners, its story reminds us that our native flora includes incredible diversity – some of it so rare that simply knowing it exists is a privilege. Sometimes the most important plants are the ones we admire from afar while working to ensure they have a future in the wild.

Whiteflower Cinquefoil

Classification

Group

Dicot

Kingdom

Plantae - Plants

Subkingdom

Tracheobionta - Vascular plants

Superdivision

Spermatophyta - Seed plants

Division

Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants

Subdivision
Class

Magnoliopsida - Dicotyledons

Subclass

Rosidae

Order

Rosales

Family

Rosaceae Juss. - Rose family

Genus

Potentilla L. - cinquefoil

Species

Potentilla albiflora L.O. Williams - whiteflower cinquefoil

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