Simcoe County Master Gardeners 
Grow Natives!
PLANT PROFILE
COMMON NAME: Black-Eyed Susan
BINOMIAL: Rudbeckia hirta
| Family | Asteraceae |
| Cdn Native Range | much of southern Canada including central Ontario |
| Natural habitat | open meadows, roadsides, open woods, sandy or rocky sites |
| Type | herbaceous perennial, short-lived |
| Features | showy daisy-like flowers, strong summer colour, good pollinator |
| Growth habit | upright, clump forming, hairy foliage, single to multi stemmed |
| Mature height | 30–90 cm (12–36 in) |
| Mature spread | 30–45 cm (12–18 in) |
| Life span | 2–3 years, maintains population through self seeding |
| Cdn Hardiness Zone | 3–7 |
| Growing conditions | full sun, tolerates light shade but flowering reduced |
| Soil conditions | adaptable, prefers well-drained sandy or loamy soil, tolerates poor soils |
| Watering needs | moderate, water during establishment, drought tolerant once established |
| Fertilizer needs | low, excessive fertility reduces flowering, compost top dressing sufficient |
| Tolerance | drought tolerant, salt tolerant, moderately deer and rabbit resistant |
| Maintenance rank | low |
| Maintenance needs | deadhead to prolong blooming, leave seed heads for winter wildlife value, cut back early spring |
| Bloom | June-September, 5–8 cm (2–3 in) golden-yellow ray flowers with dark central brown cone, not fragrant |
| Fruit | dry seed in the cone, not showy but valuable to birds |
| Pollinator support | abundant nectar and pollen for native bees, butterflies and insects |
| Environmental support | seeds feed birds like goldfinches; supports native specialist bees including the coneflower mining bee |
| Garden Use | garden beds, borders, slopes, meadow gardens, pollinator gardens, rain gardens, naturalized areas, roadside plantings, cut flowers |
| Risks & Cautions | short-lived, relies on self seeding, susceptible to powdery mildew if humid |
References: Forest Gene Conservation Assn., https://fgca.net; Ontario Wildflowers, http://ontariowildflowers.com; Native Plant Trust Go Botany, https://gobotany.nativeplanttrust.org

Photo Credits:
Black-Eyed Susan (credit: Frank Mayfield, Wikimedia Commons)
Black-Eyed Susan – fall (credit: Masood Aslami, Pexels)
