North America Non-native Plant

Straggler Daisy

Botanical name: Calyptocarpus vialis

USDA symbol: CAVI2

Life cycle: perennial

Habit: forb

Native status: Non-native, reproduces and persists in the wild in Hawaii âš˜ Non-native, reproduces and persists in the wild in the lower 48 states âš˜ Non-native, reproduces and persists in the wild in Pacific Basin excluding Hawaii  

Synonyms: Synedrellopsis grisebachii auct. non Hieron. & Kuntze (SYGR3)  âš˜  Synedrella vialis (Less.) A. Gray (SYVI)   

Straggler Daisy: A Cheerful Ground Cover with a Wandering Spirit Meet the straggler daisy (Calyptocarpus vialis), a charming little perennial that’s made itself quite at home across the southern United States. With its sunny yellow blooms and easy-going nature, this low-growing plant has quietly spread from its Central and South ...

Straggler Daisy: A Cheerful Ground Cover with a Wandering Spirit

Meet the straggler daisy (Calyptocarpus vialis), a charming little perennial that’s made itself quite at home across the southern United States. With its sunny yellow blooms and easy-going nature, this low-growing plant has quietly spread from its Central and South American origins to become a familiar sight in gardens and wild spaces alike.

What Is Straggler Daisy?

Straggler daisy is a herbaceous perennial that lives up to its common name with a delightfully wandering growth habit. This member of the sunflower family produces small, bright yellow daisy-like flowers that seem to pop up wherever the plant decides to spread. As a forb, it lacks woody stems but makes up for it with persistent underground parts that help it return year after year.

Where You’ll Find It

Originally from Central and South America, straggler daisy has established itself across much of the southern and southwestern United States. You can find it growing in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, and even as far as Hawaii and Guam. It’s particularly comfortable in zones 8-11, where mild winters allow it to thrive year-round.

Garden Appeal and Characteristics

This little charmer typically grows 6-12 inches tall with a spreading habit that makes it excellent ground cover. The small yellow flowers may not be show-stoppers individually, but they create a cheerful carpet effect when the plant is happy and spreading. Its facultative wetland status means it’s quite adaptable—equally content in moist garden beds or drier locations.

Key features:

  • Low-growing perennial with spreading habit
  • Small, bright yellow daisy flowers
  • Drought tolerant once established
  • Adaptable to various soil conditions
  • Blooms for extended periods

Should You Plant Straggler Daisy?

Here’s where things get interesting. Straggler daisy isn’t native to North America, but it’s also not considered invasive or problematic in most areas where it grows. It’s simply naturalized—meaning it’s found its niche and settled in without causing major ecological disruption.

If you’re drawn to its cheerful flowers and easy-care nature, straggler daisy can work well in informal garden settings, naturalized areas, or as ground cover where you want something that pretty much takes care of itself. However, if you’re passionate about supporting native ecosystems, you might consider some fantastic native alternatives instead.

Native Alternatives to Consider

Before planting straggler daisy, consider these native options that offer similar benefits:

  • Lanceleaf coreopsis (Coreopsis lanceolata) – yellow flowers, drought tolerant
  • Wild bergamot (Monarda fistulosa) – excellent pollinator plant
  • Native asters – late-season color and wildlife benefits
  • Regional native groundcovers specific to your area

Growing Straggler Daisy Successfully

If you decide to grow straggler daisy, you’ll find it refreshingly undemanding. This adaptable plant thrives in various soil types and, once established, tolerates drought quite well. It performs best in full sun to partial shade and doesn’t require rich, pampered soil to flourish.

Care tips:

  • Plant in well-draining soil (though it tolerates various conditions)
  • Water regularly during establishment, then reduce frequency
  • Requires minimal fertilization
  • May self-seed and spread naturally
  • Deadhead spent flowers to encourage continued blooming

Pollinator and Wildlife Value

While not a native plant powerhouse for wildlife, straggler daisy does offer some benefits to small pollinators who visit its modest flowers. The extended blooming period provides a consistent, if not spectacular, source of nectar throughout the growing season.

The Bottom Line

Straggler daisy is one of those plants that’s neither hero nor villain in the garden world. It’s a pleasant, undemanding addition that won’t cause problems but won’t create a wildlife paradise either. If you’re looking for easy-care ground cover and don’t mind a non-native plant, it could work for you. But if you want to maximize your garden’s ecological impact, investing in native alternatives will give you more bang for your gardening buck—and better support for local wildlife too.

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

FAC

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

Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain

FAC

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

Eastern Mountains and Piedmont

FAC

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

Great Plains

FAC

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

Hawaii

FAC

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

Midwest

FAC

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

Northcentral & Northeast

FACU

Facultative Upland - Plants with this status usually occurs in non-wetlands but may occur in wetlands

Straggler Daisy

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

Calyptocarpus Less. - calyptocarpus

Species

Calyptocarpus vialis Less. - straggler daisy

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