Native Plants

Rock Cinquefoil

Potentilla rupincola

USDA symbol: PORU4

perennial forb

Lower 48 states: native

If you’re the type of gardener who gets excited about rare plants and loves a good challenge, rock cinquefoil might just be your next obsession. This little Colorado native is as tough as the rocky slopes it calls home, but it’s also rarer than a perfect gardening day without weeds. ...

Rock Cinquefoil may be listed as rare in your area.
Global Conservation Status

Status: S2 | Imperiled: Extremely rare. Typically 6 to 20 occurrences or 1,000 to 3,000 remaining individuals.

Rock Cinquefoil: A Rare Colorado Gem for the Adventurous Gardener

If you’re the type of gardener who gets excited about rare plants and loves a good challenge, rock cinquefoil might just be your next obsession. This little Colorado native is as tough as the rocky slopes it calls home, but it’s also rarer than a perfect gardening day without weeds.

What is Rock Cinquefoil?

Rock cinquefoil (Potentilla rupincola) is a perennial forb that’s as Colorado as mountain snow and craft beer. This native wildflower belongs to the rose family and produces cheerful yellow flowers that look like tiny golden coins scattered across rocky terrain. Don’t let its delicate appearance fool you – this plant is built for Colorado’s harsh alpine conditions.

You might occasionally see it listed under its synonym Potentilla effusa var. rupincola, but rock cinquefoil is the name that sticks in most gardening circles.

Where Does It Grow?

Rock cinquefoil is a Colorado exclusive – you won’t find this little gem growing wild anywhere else in the world. It’s what botanists call an endemic species, meaning Colorado is its one and only home. The plant clings to rocky outcrops and gravelly slopes in the state’s alpine and subalpine zones, typically at elevations where the air is thin and the growing season is short.

  • Species observed
  • No observations

A Word of Caution: This Plant is Rare

Here’s where things get serious for a moment. Rock cinquefoil has a global conservation status of S2, which means it’s considered imperiled. With only 6 to 20 known occurrences and potentially fewer than 3,000 individual plants in the wild, this species is walking a tightrope toward extinction.

If you’re considering growing rock cinquefoil, please only obtain plants from reputable nurseries that propagate from responsibly sourced material – never collect from the wild. Every plant in its natural habitat is precious for the species’ survival.

Why Grow Rock Cinquefoil?

Despite the conservation concerns (or perhaps because of them), rock cinquefoil offers some compelling reasons for the right gardener:

  • Conservation impact: Growing responsibly sourced plants helps preserve genetic diversity
  • Unique Colorado heritage: You’ll be growing something that exists nowhere else on Earth
  • Low maintenance: Once established, it thrives on neglect
  • Pollinator support: The bright yellow flowers attract native bees and other small pollinators
  • Rock garden star: Perfect for alpine and xeriscape garden designs

Garden Design and Landscape Use

Rock cinquefoil shines in specialized garden settings. Think rock gardens, alpine gardens, or xeriscape designs where its natural toughness can be appreciated. It works beautifully as a ground cover between stones or as an accent plant in gravelly areas that mimic its natural habitat.

This isn’t a plant for formal perennial borders or lush cottage gardens – it’s for gardeners who appreciate the stark beauty of Colorado’s high country and want to recreate that feeling at home.

Growing Conditions and Care

Rock cinquefoil is adapted to USDA hardiness zones 4-7, but don’t let that fool you into thinking it’s easy to grow. This plant has very specific needs:

Soil Requirements

  • Excellent drainage is absolutely critical
  • Rocky, gravelly, or sandy soils work best
  • Avoid rich, organic soils that retain moisture
  • Slightly alkaline to neutral pH preferred

Light and Water

  • Full sun is essential
  • Minimal water once established
  • Drought tolerance is one of its superpowers
  • Overwatering is the quickest way to kill it

Planting and Care Tips

Growing rock cinquefoil successfully requires mimicking its natural alpine environment:

  • Choose your location carefully: A sunny, well-draining slope or raised bed works best
  • Amend heavy soils: Add coarse sand, gravel, or pumice to improve drainage
  • Plant in spring: Give it a full growing season to establish before winter
  • Water sparingly: Deep, infrequent watering during the first year, then rely on natural precipitation
  • Skip the fertilizer: Rich soils can actually harm this plant
  • Mulch with gravel: Organic mulches retain too much moisture

The Bottom Line

Rock cinquefoil isn’t for every gardener or every garden. It requires specific conditions, responsible sourcing, and a commitment to conservation. But for those who appreciate rare native plants and want to play a small part in preserving Colorado’s unique botanical heritage, it offers a rewarding challenge.

If you’re not quite ready for the commitment that comes with growing an imperiled species, consider other native Colorado cinquefoils like shrubby cinquefoil (Potentilla fruticosa) or silvery cinquefoil (Potentilla argentea) that offer similar aesthetic appeal without the conservation concerns.

Whatever you choose, remember that every native plant in your garden is a small victory for local ecosystems and the wildlife that depends on them. Rock cinquefoil might be rare, but the impact of responsible native gardening is anything but.

Potentilla rupincola 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. Potentilla rupincola is also known as:

Potentilla effusa Douglas ex var. rupincola | USDA symbol: POEFR

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: Rosidae
Order: Rosales
Family: Rosaceae Juss. - Rose family
Genus: Potentilla L. - cinquefoil

Species: Potentilla rupincola Osterh. - rock cinquefoil

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