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Arrow-grass

Triglochin maritima

Care

Sun

full sun

Water

moderate

Soil

Standing

Size

0–2ft tall

Bloom

Mar-Aug

Container

Friendly

Native Range

Coastal salt marshes and alkali wetlands throughout California, typically below 2,000 ft elevation, extending to British Columbia and Mexico

Care Guide

Planting

Plant Arrow-grass in full sun in a location that stays consistently wet or even has standing water - this is a marsh plant, so boggy conditions are ideal, not a bug. Space plants about 12 inches apart since they can spread via stolons. Spring is your best planting window. Unlike most Bay Area plants, Arrow-grass actually thrives in poor drainage, so don't amend your soil trying to improve it.

After Planting

Water deeply and keep the soil wet throughout the growing season (spring through summer); this plant won't tolerate drying out. Arrow-grass flowers from March through August, and you can deadhead spent flower spikes if you want a tidier look, though it's not necessary. The biggest mistake Bay Area gardeners make is treating this like a typical perennial - it needs consistent moisture year-round and will decline or die if planted in regular garden beds. Think of it as a water garden plant first.

Visit Calscape for more information about Arrow-grass

Endangered & Threatened Species Supported

Yellow Rail Coturnicops noveboracensis
CA: Threatened, CA Special Concern

Yellow Rail; California state threatened species

Wildlife Supported

Birds

Foliage · Winter

Winter resident in coastal bays and marshes; primary forage in eelgrass beds and salt marshes, Dec-Feb

Foliage · Fall

Critical fall migration staging resource in coastal marshes, Sep-Nov

Foliage · Winter

Winter waterfowl in coastal salt marshes, Nov-Mar

Foliage · Fall

Rare migrant through coastal marshes; uses emergent vegetation cover and forages on marsh plants

Insects

Larval Host · Summer

Larvae feed on marsh vegetation; adult moths present Jun-Sep

Larval Host · Year-Round

Fungal specialist on Triglochin maritima; forms disease relationship year-round

Foliage · Year-Round

Sap-feeding herbivore common in salt marshes and coastal wetlands

Foliage · Spring

Larval miner in plant tissues, common in wet habitats Apr-Jun

Foliage · Summer

Herbivorous beetle feeding on emergent marsh vegetation, Jun-Aug

Foliage · Spring

Sap-feeding insect on marsh plants, primary activity Apr-Jun

Where to Buy

Native Here Nursery

101 Golf Course Dr, Tilden Regional Park, Berkeley

Sat 10am-2pm

3.0 mi (510) 549-0211 Website