Bunchberry
Cornus canadensis
Bunchberry (Cornus canadensis) is a charming, carpet-forming wildflower of the northern forest floor that holds a secret of explosive power — it produces the fastest plant motion ever recorded. While its tiny white flowers and clusters of bright red berries seem peaceful enough, the stamens are actually coiled springs that catapult pollen into the air at accelerations of up to 24,000 m/s², launching it to heights of2.5 cm in less than 0.5 milliseconds. This diminutive plant is, in fact, the world's smallest dogwood — a creeping, woodland-floor version of the familiar flowering dogwood tree, scaled down to just 5 to 20 cm tall.
• Holds the record for the FASTEST plant motion ever recorded — pollen is catapulted in under 0.5 milliseconds, with accelerations exceeding 2,400 times the force of gravity
• The world's smallest dogwood species — a miniature, creeping version of the familiar dogwood tree
• The showy "petals" are actually white bracts (modified leaves); the true flowers are the tiny greenish cluster at the center
• Forms dense, evergreen groundcover carpets in the boreal and northern hardwood forest
• The bright red drupes (berries) are edible with a mild, slightly sweet flavor
• The genus name Cornus means "horn," referring to the hard wood of the dogwood trees
• Found across Canada from Newfoundland to British Columbia and northward to the Arctic
• Extends southward through New England, the Great Lakes states, the Rocky Mountains, and the Pacific Northwest to northern California
• Also occurs in the Appalachian Mountains at higher elevations
• Disjunct populations in northeastern Asia (Japan, Korea, Siberia)
• One of the most abundant and widespread forest floor plants in the boreal forest
• Grows in moist coniferous and mixed forests, bogs, and subalpine meadows
• First described by Linnaeus in 1753
• The genus Cornus contains approximately 30 to 60 species worldwide
Rhizome:
• Slender, creeping extensively, branched, woody, forming interconnected colonies
Leaves:
• 4 to 6 leaves in a whorl at the top of the stem
• Ovate to elliptic, 2 to 7 cm long and 1 to 3 cm wide
• Dark green, hairless, prominently parallel-veined
• Sessile or very short-petioled
• Semi-evergreen to evergreen
Stem:
• Erect, slender, green to reddish, unbranched above the creeping base
Flower:
• Terminal cluster of 10 to 25 tiny greenish flowers surrounded by 4 showy white bracts
• Bracts ovate, 1 to 2.5 cm long, white, petal-like
• True flowers only 1 to 2 mm across, greenish-yellow to purplish
• Stamens function as explosive pollen catapults
• Blooms May through July
Fruit:\• Bright red drupes, 5 to 8 mm in diameter, in tight clusters ("bunches")
• Each drupe contains a single hard pit
• Found in moist coniferous and mixed forests, bogs, subalpine meadows, and rocky barrens
• Tolerates a very wide range of light from deep shade to full sun
• The explosive pollen catapult is triggered when an insect lands on the flower, ensuring pollen lands directly on the pollinator's body
• Pollinated by a wide range of insects including bees, flies, and beetles
• Red berries are consumed and dispersed by birds, particularly thrushes, grouse, and warblers
• Forms extensive clonal colonies through rhizome spread — some colonies may cover hundreds of square meters
• Associates with Canada mayflower, starflower, and ferns in the boreal forest
• Semi-evergreen foliage provides winter forage for ptarmigan and other northern birds
• Thrives in acidic, humus-rich, cool soils
• Plant in partial to full shade in moist, acidic, humus-rich soil
• Spreads readily through rhizomes to form a dense, attractive groundcover
• Ideal for naturalizing under conifers, along shaded pathways, and in rock gardens
• Plant container-grown specimens or small divisions in spring
• Keep soil consistently moist — does not tolerate drought or heat
• Tolerates poor, sandy soils if moisture is adequate
• Excellent companion for ferns, wintergreen, and blueberries in native garden plantings
• Very cold-hardy — survives to USDA Zone 2
• Relatively deer-resistant
Fun Fact
Bunchberry holds one of the most astonishing records in all of biology: it produces the fastest motion ever recorded in the plant kingdom. When a visiting insect triggers the flower, the four stamens snap upward in less than 0.5 milliseconds — an acceleration of over 24,000 m/s², or roughly 2,400 times the force of gravity. To put this in perspective, a fighter jet pilot experiences about 9 G-forces; the bunchberry stamen experiences 2,400. The stamens function like tiny medieval catapults, with bent filaments that release stored elastic energy in an explosive snap. The pollen is launched upward at speeds that would be invisible to the naked eye, landing on the insect's body or being carried away on air currents to reach neighboring flowers. This extraordinary mechanism was only discovered in 2005 by researchers using ultra-high-speed cameras capable of filming at 10,000 frames per second.
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