Rhizomes horizontal, shallow, internodes 1.0-3.5 cm. Leaves: petiole 6-20 cm, crisped-hirsute. Leaf blade not variegate, cordate-reniform to reniform, 4-8(-20) × 8-14(-21.5) cm, apex rounded or obtuse; surfaces abaxially appressed-hirsute, usually sparsely so, adaxially appressed-hirsute, at least along main veins, marginal hairs perpendicular to margin or curved toward apex. Flowers erect or ascending; peduncle 1.5-3 cm; false calyx tube cylindric, externally tan or purplish, hirsute (often densely), internally white or pale green, occasionally mottled with purple, with white or purple hairs; distal portion of sepal spreading or reflexed at anthesis, 6-24 mm, apex apiculate to acuminate or filiform-attenuate, abaxially green or purple, hirsute, adaxially purple, puberulent with crisped purple or pale hairs; pollen sacs 1-1.5 mm, sterile tip of connective on inner stamens purple, 0.5-1 mm, shorter than or about as long as pollen sacs. 2 n = 26. Flowering spring-early summer (Mar-Jul). Understory of deciduous (rarely coniferous) forests; 0-1300 m; Man., N.B., Ont., Que; Ala., Ark., Conn., Del., D.C., Ga., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Kans., Ky., La., Maine, Md., Mass., Mich., Minn., Miss., Mo., Nebr., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., N.Dak., Ohio, Okla., Pa., S.C., S.Dak., Tenn., Vt., Va., W.Va., Wis. The rhizomes of Asarum canadense are occasionally used for seasoning. Handling the leaves is said to cause dermatitis in some people. Native Americans used Asarum canadense medicinally to treat flux, poor digestion, swollen breasts, coughs and colds, typhus and scarlet fever, nerves, sore throats, cramps, heaves, earaches, headaches, convulsions, asthma, tuberculosis, urinary disorders, and venereal disease; as a stimulant, a seasoning, and a charm; and to strengthen other herbal concoctions and heighten appetite (D. E. Moerman 1986).
Perennial colony-forming herb 10 - 20 cm tall Leaves: alternate, with a 6 - 20 cm long bristly-hairy stalk. The blade is 4 - 8 cm long, 8 - 14 cm wide, heart- to kidney-shaped with a rounded to blunt tip, sparsely bristly-hairy, and arises in pairs from the rhizome. Flowers: solitary, arising from between a pair of leaves, erect to ascending, 2 - 4 cm, lacking petals but having a tubular calyx ending in three sepal lobes and twelve stamens. The calyx is reddish brown and densely bristly-hairy on the outside, white to pale green (sometimes mottled purple) with white or purple hairs inslde, and the reddish brown sepal lobes are spreading to reflexed at maturity. Fruit: a fleshy capsule containing egg-shaped seeds with fleshy appendages.
Similar species: Aristolochia serpentaria differs by having S-shaped flowers, dry capsules, and lance- to egg-shaped or oblong leaves borne on an erect stem.
Flowering: early April to late June
Habitat and ecology: Locally common in wooded floodplains, but also found in upland mesic sites.
Occurence in the Chicago region: native
Notes: The common name, wild ginger, comes from the ginger-like scent released when the roots are bruised. However, true ginger comes from Zingiber officinale. This species makes a great native, shade-tolerant groundcover in gardens.
Etymology: Asarum comes from the ancient Greek name, asaron, with unknown derivation. Canadense means "from Canada."
Plants hairy, especially the petioles and cal; lvs cordate-rotund to cordate- reniform, mostly 8-12 cm wide at anthesis, larger at maturity; peduncle stout, 2-5 cm; fls 2-4 cm; calyx tube short, erect, the lobes spreading or reflexed; 2n=26. Rich woods, usually in colonies; N.B. and Que. to Ont. and Minn., s. to N.C., n. Ala., and n. La. Apr., May. Var. canadense, with essentially the range of the species, has the cal-lobes spreading from the base, curved upward beyond the middle, and gradually narrowed into a revolute-margined slender tip 0.5-2 cm. (A. acuminatum, the extreme form) Var. reflexum (E. P. Bicknell) B. L. Rob., from N.Y. to Mich. and Io., and southward, commoner in the Middle West, has the cal-lobes reflexed, often closely appressed to the ovary, triangular, abruptly contracted into a short, tubular, 2-4 mm tip. (A. ambiguum, a form intermediate to var. canadense)
Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.