Common yarrow (Achillea millefolium) was one of the earliest plants I added to my butterfly garden. It definitely attracts pollinators and it showed up on several lists of best plants for my area. This spring, I even gave some to several neighbors because of my success with it. Soon after, I was forced to reconsider the whole enterprise when I saw yarrow on a list of non-native, invasive species for this region. What exactly was going on here? Did I make a mistake years ago that had perpetuated all this time? Was there some new information about this plant? What else might I be wrong about in all my dedicated efforts to plant a mostly native garden? Was my whole crusade to support biodiversity a fool’s errand?
I started researching with a lot of my go-to sources. Sure enough, some of them showed it as non-native, others as native, and still others as… both. They didn’t all agree on the scientific name, either. What? So I started using search terms like “yarrow native range” and “yarrow native distribution,” which shed very little light on the matter. Instead my search presented me with phrases like “native to the Northern hemisphere” and “cirumboreal distribution.” This was about as useful as when you’re eight and a grown-up asks you where you live, and with a mischievous grin you say: “Earth.”

Further reading started to clear this up: yes, it is native to Asia, Europe, and North America and yes that native range more or less includes all of the United States… but it’s also much more complicated. I was beginning to see how a plant could be both “native” and “introduced” to the same place, but I wasn’t quite getting it until I came across this excellent piece. Nowhere else could I find all of the pieces of the puzzle so elegantly combined. I won’t try to do the same here but essentially it is a species complex, there are many cultivars, and human interaction with the plant is extensive. Some of what we call Achillea millefolium is native, some is not, some may have characters of both the native and non-native varieties, and good luck to any non-biologists determining if an individual specimen is locally native!
The linked history with human activities makes me start thinking in circles. That interaction is over such a long time scale that it blurs the line between native and introduced. If humans aided its distribution, but over tens of thousands of years in lockstep with our own expansion, was that a natural process? This to me is an astonishingly fascinating question. It is certainly much different than one guy bringing a hundred starlings to a new continent, but is it also different from a plant gradually increasing its range as its seeds are distributed by birds? If so, just how different? Where is the line between humans as a part of nature and humans disrupting or interfering with nature? How we answer these questions can shape the very core of environmentalism, and I doubt there is one right answer.


Aside from that rabbit hole of natural philosophy, I also needed to decide if I still believed common yarrow was a good choice for my butterfly garden. Are its native or invasive characters stronger? I don’t immediately disregard all non-native plants in my landscape choices, but I do typically steer clear of anything that’s a known invasive in my area. I have noticed that this plant spreads aggressively – as predicted by every source I consulted years ago. Most of what I have planted is the white-flowering, “natural” variety and not one of the brightly-colored cultivars. It does provide the ecosystem function of attracting pollinators and it is a host plant for some local butterfly species. I can control the spread in various ways and it is hardy and low-maintenance. Is it a net benefit to the local ecosystem? I could envision a reasonable defense of either position based on my understanding of the available facts. A purist might say that with no way of knowing for certain that your plant is a locally native ecotype (or technically a native species at all) one should never include that plant in support of biodiversity. A non-purist might counter that because it serves the ecological function of a native, and some related forms are native, there’s no reason to exclude it. I believe in this case there are angels on both shoulders who happen to disagree.
For now, I am listening to the angel on the non-purist shoulder. I will be looking to replace any brightly-colored varieties with other plants, since I know for sure those are cultivars. I will keep the white-flowered specimens I have and manually restrict their spread. It hasn’t (so far) choked out any of my other plants, but there are plenty of other avenues to adding yellow and pink blooms to my garden for color balance. Fortunately, this isn’t an irreversible decision. I’m perfectly willing to reevaluate a matter this cloudy now and again. I am still building my knowledge base on Maryland native plants and as my familiarity with other species increases I may find there is no longer room for a plant that walks in both the native and invasive worlds.


Once again you have enlightened me, Ben! I confess that I like the looks of the pink one the best, and would have been drawn to that. But I find the appearance of the white one preferable to the yellow ones I have seen (and grown in the past).
I find it interesting how plants get added to the invasive species list. Years ago the Arbor Day Foundation gave away autumn olive seedlings. Ours grew huge. Then they were put on the invasive species list, so we cut them down and ripped them out. Our winged euonymus bushes are also considered invasive now (because the birds like the berries and spread the seeds afar). I have no plans to replace them as yet. We had the Norway maples straddling our yard and the neighbor’s to the north removed. I wish I had known what they were and how awful they were before they shaded out and killed the cedars growing along the border, and allowed ivy to flourish in the shade provided.
Now I spend much of my time trying to eradicate bittersweet and black swallow wort in our yard!
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I think this is part of why the purists argue for only planting natives always. I’m still not quite that strict but I do understand that something not known to be invasive can suddenly become invasive, especially with rapid changes due to climate change. There’s also some dumb politics over what does and does not get on “official” invasives lists. Maryland, for example, has a hierarchical list of invasives restricted from sale and distribution, but that list is far from all the plants which are invasive in the state.
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I just received a packet of white common yarrow seeds. If you were me would you plant them? I thought it was native and it’s description as aggressive appeals to me the same way blue mistflower does. But I’m trying to only plant natives. I’m about 2 years into this native plant journey. I came across your post googling to see if yarrow is native
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I ultimately decided to remove this plant from my own garden and replace it with natives. That said, I’m not an absolutist and I think there’s always room to have some non-native plants. I think it’s in the category of “fine to have if you want it.”
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