Skip to main content
Close

Canadian Bunchberry

Cornus canadensis

Photo by eelhsamarie
Published on Project Noah
Zoom
NominateNominate for Wildlife Photograph of the Month
reportFlag Spotting

49.7835, -92.8336

Field Notes

Description:

This plant is known by several different names: Canadian Bunchberry, Dogwood Bunchberry, Quatretemps, Creeping Dogwood, Crackerberry and Canadian Dwarf Cornel. It is a species of flowering plant in the Dogwood family, but unlike its relatives, which are mostly trees and shrubs, Canadian Bunchberry only grows to about 20 cm (8 in.) tall.

Habitat:

Canadian Bunchberry is native to Northern Asia, Northern USA, Canada and Greenland. It is a forest plant needing cool, moist soil. It is often found growing along the edges of moist forests, on old tree stumps, in mossy areas on the forest floor, or in other moist open areas.

Notes:

There are many of these plants growing in the forest that borders our local marsh. Where they do grow, there are many of them close together and they are easily one of the most prominent ground level plants in many of our local forests. Earlier in the summer they have pretty white flowers and in later summer/early fall, they produce clusters of bright red berries.

Species ID Suggestions

Comments (0)

Be the first to comment

Sign in to comment

Accelerate our Mission to Photograph 
Every Species in the World!

Image
Butterflies icon

Wildlife Community

Wildlife Community

Join a worldwide community passionate about wildlife and nature!

Join Project Noah

Nature School

Nature School

Transform your green space into a curiosity-creating nature classroom!

Visit Nature School

Wildlife Game

Wildlife Game

Defend wildlife throughout the jungle in thrilling nature game!

Play Baboon