Common Name: Caucasian stonecrop 
     
	
                        
                            Type: Herbaceous perennial
                        
                        
                            Family: Crassulaceae
                        
                        
                        
                            Zone: 3 to 9
                        
                        
                            Height: 0.25 to 0.50 feet
                        
                        
                            Spread: 1.00 to 1.50 feet
                        
                        
                            Bloom Time: May to July
                        
                        
                            Bloom Description: Pink
                        
                        
                            Sun: Full sun
                        
                        
                            Water: Dry to medium
                        
                        
                            Maintenance: Low
                        
                        
                                Suggested Use: Ground Cover, Naturalize
		                    
                                Flower: Showy
		                    
                                Leaf: Colorful
		                    
                                Attracts: Butterflies
		                    
                                Tolerate: Rabbit, Deer, Drought, Erosion, Dry Soil, Shallow-Rocky Soil, Urban Conditions
		                    
                        
                        
                     
                    
                 
                                   
                
                    Culture
                    Easily grown in acidic, average, dry to medium moisture, well-drained soils in full sun. Tolerates some light shade.  Likes sandy or gravelly soils.  Tolerates poor soils.  Needs good soil drainage to perform well.  Drought tolerant.  Avoid overwatering.  Plants may be sited 12” apart when grown as a ground cover.  Easily propagated by cuttings or division.  Plants spread easily (root where nodes touch the ground).  Cut a leaf from a healthy sedum with about 1-2" of stem and plant the stem with the leaf above soil.  Plants are evergreen in warm winter climates.
	             
                
                    Noteworthy Characteristics
                    Sedum spurium, commonly called Caucasian stonecrop or two row stonecrop, is a low-growing, sprawling, mat-forming sedum or stonecrop that is commonly grown as a ground cover.  It is native to the Caucusus.  This is an evergreen plant that typically rises only 3-6” tall but spreads to 18-24” wide by creeping, branching stems that easily root at the nodes.  Thick, succulent, opposite, obovate, flattened leaves (to 1” long) with wedge-shaped bases are toothed near the ends.  Leaves are medium green with reddish-tinged margins.  Lower stem leaves are deciduous, but newer leaves near the stem tips are evergreen, typically turning deep burgundy in fall for overwintering.  Leaves are arranged in two rows along the stems, hence the sometimes used common name of two row stonecrop.  Tiny, 5-petaled,  star-shaped, pinkish-red flowers (to 3/4” diameter) in dense, 4-branched inflorescences (to 4-6" tall) bloom from late spring to mid-summer (June-July in St. Louis) atop upright reddish flower stems.  Flowers are attractive to butterflies.
Genus name comes from the Latin word sedeo meaning to sit in reference to the general growing habit of many of the sedums (they sit and sprawl over rocks).
Specific epithet means false. Its use here is unclear.
‘Tricolor’ is a sprawling, low-growing, ground-hugging, mat-forming stonecrop (also commonly called two-row stonecrop because leaves are in two columns along the stems) that is frequently grown as a ground cover.  Tricolor leaves (each to 1" long) feature green in the center with white margins tinged with pink.  Leaves are opposite, thick, succulent, toothed near the tips, obovate, flattened and narrower than those of the species.  Leaf color remains attractive throughout the growing season.  This is an evergreen plant that typically rises only 3-6” tall but spreads to 12-18” wide.  Creeping, branching stems root at the nodes.  Tiny, star-shaped, pink flowers (to 3/4” diameter) bloom in four-branched inflorescences (cymes to 4-6” tall) in late spring to mid-summer (June-July in St. Louis).
	             
                
                    Problems
                    No serious insect or disease problems.  Slugs and snails may appear.  Watch for scale.
	             
                
                    Uses
                    Rock garden or small area ground cover.  Border fronts.  Stone wall pockets.  Sunny banks or slopes.  Edging.  Containers.  Best when planted in groups or massed as a ground cover.