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Dig into Plants: Heartleaf Foamflower

Heartleaf Foam Flower

Other Common Names: Heart-leaf Foamflower

Scientific Name: Tiarella cordifolia

Native to Alabama: Yes

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center – Albert F.W. Vick

Learn More About...

Basic Plant Information

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center – Stephanie Brundage

  • I am a vascular plant with no woody stems above ground, so I am herbaceous.
  • I do not keep leaves year-round in colder climates and keep my leaves year-round in mild climates, so I am semi-evergreen.
  • I die back in winter but regrow in spring for many seasons, so I am perennial.
  • I can grow 2 – 4 feet high and 2 – 3 feet wide.

Ecological Benefits

This plant provides food for:

Butterflies

Other Pollinators

Native Bees

Maintenance Notes

  • Not dormant in the winter.
  • In the winter, leaves are reddish bronze.
  • Removal of flower spikes after bloom will improve the appearance of foliage mound.
  • Can be massed to form an attractive ground cover in shaded rock gardens, or moist areas; no serious insect or disease problems.
  • When watering, hold hose to base of plant for a count of 5 seconds. Water should reach all roots.
  • Avoid sprinkling water on the leaves.
  • Requires moist to wet soil at all times.

Moist to wet soil at all times: water three times per week.

Habitat Requirements

This plant prefers:

Shade
(Less than 2 hours of sun per day)

Prefers moist to wet soil at all times

Well-drained, Acidic,
or Moist Soil

Leaf, Flower & Seed Identification

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center – Nature Center of Charleston

LEAF DESCRIPTION

Semi-glossy, 3-5 leaves rise directly from stolons (stems that grow at the soil surface or just below).

Leaf Characteristics Chart (PDF)

Shape:
Cordate

Margin:
Serrate & Lobate

   

Arrangement:
Basal Rosette

Form:
Simple

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center – Stefan Bloodworth

FLOWER DESCRIPTION

Compact cluster of small flowers attached by short equal stalks at equal distances along a central stem (raceme); racemes are at ends of 6-12 inch stalks; flowers have long, slender stamens (male organ) giving the spikes of flowers a “foamy” appearance.

Flower Shape Chart (JPG)

Color:
White

Shape:
Stellate (star-shaped)

Bloom Months:
Apr – Jul

Native Plant Trust Go Botany – Bruce Patterson

SEED DESCRIPTION

Plant spreads by:
Seeds and Rhizomes/ Tubers/ Roots & Shoots
Spread by underground stems and form colonies

Type:
Fruit –
Dry Seed Pod

Description:
Small, lopsided capsule
that splits open; to reveal
small black seeds

Months in Seed:
Fall – Winter

Plant Life Cycle

Plant Life Cycle:

  • All plants start life as a seed.
  • The seed turns into a sprout when it grows roots.
  • The sprout becomes a seedling as grows a stem and leaves above the ground.
  • After the seedling becomes an adult plant it will grow flowers.
  • After the flowers finish blooming, each flower turns into a seed.
  • When the seeds fall down to the ground, the plant life cycle starts again.
  • Each seed can become a plant if it has the food, water and space that it needs to grow.

General Plant Life Cycle – Dreamstime

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES FOR TEACHERS

Quick Fact Sheet
(Condensed Species Info)

Plant ID Sign (Text Only):
Ready as-is PDF

Plant ID Sign (With Picture):
Ready as-is PDF

QR Code
(Links to this Webpage)

Plant ID Sign (Text Only):
Editable Word Doc

Plant ID Sign (With Picture):
Editable Word Doc

INFORMATION SOURCES FOR THIS PLANT