Species Native to Missouri
                            
                         
                     
                    
                        
                            Common Name: blue cohosh 
     
	
                        
                            Type: Herbaceous perennial
                        
                        
                            Family: Berberidaceae
                        
                        
                            Native Range: Eastern and central North America
                        
                        
                            Zone: 3 to 8
                        
                        
                            Height: 1.00 to 2.00 feet
                        
                        
                            Spread: 0.50 to 1.00 feet
                        
                        
                            Bloom Time: April
                        
                        
                            Bloom Description: Yellow-green
                        
                        
                            Sun: Part shade to full shade
                        
                        
                            Water: Medium
                        
                        
                            Maintenance: Medium
                        
                        
                                Flower: Insignificant
		                    
                                Fruit: Showy
		                    
                        
                        
                     
                    
                 
                                   
                
                    Culture
                    Best grown in shady woodland areas in rich, moist, neutral to slightly acidic soils. Needs consistently moist soils that do not dry out. Plants may be grown from seed, but usually will not flower until the third or fourth year. May be divided, but established plants are generally best left undisturbed. Can spread very slowly by rhizomes over time to form colonies.
	             
                
                    Noteworthy Characteristics
                    Caulophyllum thalictroides, commonly called blue cohosh, is a Missouri native perennial which grows 1-3' tall on strong, upright stems. It is valued not for its flowers but for its lacy, ternately-compound, blue-green foliage and its erect clusters of blue, fruit-like seeds. Foliage is suggestive of meadow rue (Thalictrum), hence the species name. Leaves appear at mid-stem, emerging a smoky blue in spring and turning bluish-green at maturity. Young plants are covered with a whitish, waxy bloom. Inconspicuous, brownish-green to yellowish-green flowers (1/2" diameter), each with 6 pointed sepals, appear in spring. Flowers give way in summer to attractive blue berry-like seeds (outer seed coating turns fleshy and blue as seeds mature) which resemble small grapes and provide good ornamental interest into fall after foliage decline has occurred.
Genus name comes from the Greek words kaulos meaning a stem and phyllon meaning a leaf.
Specific epithet means like the genus Thalictrum.
	             
                
                    Problems
                    No serious insect or disease problems. Slow to establish from seed. Berry-like seeds are poisonous.