Native Plants

Greenflowered Wintergreen

Pyrola chlorantha

USDA symbol: PYCH

perennial subshrub

Alaska: native
Canada: native
Lower 48 states: native
St. Pierre and Miquelon: native

If you’ve ever wandered through a cool, shaded forest and spotted tiny, nodding greenish flowers rising from a cluster of rounded evergreen leaves, you may have encountered the charming greenflowered wintergreen (Pyrola chlorantha). This delicate native perennial is like the shy, bookish character in a woodland story—quietly beautiful but requiring ...

Greenflowered Wintergreen may be listed as rare in your area.
New Jersey

Status: Endangered, Listed Pinelands, Highlands Listed, S1 | Endangered. In danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range.

Greenflowered Wintergreen: A Delicate Native Beauty for Woodland Gardens

If you’ve ever wandered through a cool, shaded forest and spotted tiny, nodding greenish flowers rising from a cluster of rounded evergreen leaves, you may have encountered the charming greenflowered wintergreen (Pyrola chlorantha). This delicate native perennial is like the shy, bookish character in a woodland story—quietly beautiful but requiring just the right conditions to truly thrive.

What Makes Greenflowered Wintergreen Special?

Greenflowered wintergreen is a low-growing perennial shrub that typically stays under 1.5 feet tall, making it perfect for those cozy spots in your garden where you want something subtle yet enchanting. Its evergreen basal rosette of rounded leaves provides year-round interest, while the delicate, nodding flowers that appear on slender stalks add an ethereal quality to woodland settings.

This native beauty has quite the impressive range, naturally occurring across Alaska, Canada, and much of the continental United States. You’ll find it growing wild from Alberta to Newfoundland, and from Alaska down to states like Arizona, California, and even as far east as Maine and Virginia.

  • Species observed
  • No observations

The Reality Check: Should You Plant It?

Here’s where things get a bit complicated—and honestly, that’s part of what makes native gardening so interesting! While greenflowered wintergreen is undeniably lovely, it comes with some important considerations:

The Rarity Factor

In New Jersey, this plant is listed as endangered with a rarity status of S1, meaning it’s critically imperiled in that state. If you live in an area where it’s rare, please only consider planting it if you can source it from reputable native plant nurseries that propagate their own stock—never from wild collection.

The Challenge Factor

Greenflowered wintergreen is what we might call a gardener’s puzzle. It forms essential relationships with soil fungi (mycorrhizae) that make it notoriously difficult to transplant successfully. Think of it as a plant that’s very particular about its friendships—it needs just the right soil companions to thrive.

Where Does It Fit in Your Landscape?

If you’re up for the challenge, greenflowered wintergreen can be a wonderful addition to:

  • Woodland gardens with established tree canopy
  • Naturalized forest areas
  • Shade gardens with acidic soil
  • Native plant gardens focused on regional flora

It works beautifully as an understory groundcover, creating a carpet of evergreen foliage punctuated by those charming nodding flowers.

Growing Conditions: What Does It Want?

Greenflowered wintergreen is quite specific about its preferences:

  • Light: Partial to full shade (it’s not a sun worshipper!)
  • Soil: Cool, consistently moist, acidic soil rich in organic matter
  • Hardiness: Thrives in USDA zones 2-7
  • Moisture: Prefers consistent moisture but not waterlogged conditions

Interestingly, its wetland status varies by region—from obligate upland in some areas to facultative in others, showing its adaptability to different moisture conditions depending on local climate.

Planting and Care Tips

If you decide to give greenflowered wintergreen a try, here’s your best strategy:

  • Start with seeds rather than attempting to transplant mature plants
  • Ensure your soil is acidic and rich in organic matter
  • Maintain consistent soil moisture without creating soggy conditions
  • Be patient—this isn’t a fast-growing showstopper but rather a slow, steady woodland citizen
  • Avoid disturbing established plants once they’re settled

Wildlife and Pollinator Benefits

While greenflowered wintergreen isn’t a major pollinator magnet, its small flowers do attract various small insects. It’s more about contributing to the overall ecosystem diversity of your woodland garden rather than being a pollinator powerhouse.

The Bottom Line

Greenflowered wintergreen is definitely for the patient, dedicated native gardener who appreciates subtle beauty and doesn’t mind a bit of a challenge. If you have the right conditions—cool, moist, acidic, shaded spots—and can source it responsibly, it can be a lovely addition to a woodland garden. However, if you’re looking for something easier to establish or more dramatic in appearance, you might want to consider other native woodland plants like wild ginger, mayapple, or native ferns.

Remember, successful native gardening is often about working with what naturally wants to grow in your area rather than fighting against nature’s preferences. Greenflowered wintergreen will reward the right gardener in the right location, but it’s definitely not a plant for everyone!

Pyrola chlorantha is also known as...

Often we refer to plants by their common names. When shopping for plants the scientific name is the best way to positively identify the plant species you desire. But some plants have more than one name! While it doesn't happen often, nurseries might display one name while you're searching for another. Pyrola chlorantha is also known as:

Pyrola chlorantha var. convoluta | USDA symbol: PYCHC
Pyrola chlorantha var. paucifolia | USDA symbol: PYCHP
Pyrola chlorantha var. revoluta | USDA symbol: PYCHR
Pyrola convoluta | USDA symbol: PYCO3
Pyrola oxypetala Austin ex | USDA symbol: PYOX
Pyrola virens | USDA symbol: PYVI3
Pyrola virens var. convoluta | USDA symbol: PYVIC
Pyrola virens var. saximontana | USDA symbol: PYVIS

Why do some plants have more than one name? Over time plant species may be renamed for a few reasons:

  1. Botanists in different regions named the same plant without knowing it had already been classified.
  2. A species was reclassified after scientific advances in, for example, DNA analysis.
  3. Slight variations within a species are sometimes mistakenly identified as entirely new species.

Classification

Group: Dicot
Kingdom: Plantae - Plants
Subkingdom: Tracheobionta - Vascular plants
Superdivision: Spermatophyta - Seed plants
Division: Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants
Class: Magnoliopsida - Dicotyledons
Subclass: Dilleniidae
Order: Ericales
Family: Pyrolaceae Lindl. - Shinleaf family
Genus: Pyrola L. - wintergreen

Species: Pyrola chlorantha Sw. - greenflowered wintergreen

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