It is now present in many parts of the temperate world as an alien species, probably introduced with imported European
wheat. It is known to occur throughout much of the
United States and parts of
Canada, parts of
Australia and
New Zealand. In parts of
Europe, intensive mechanized farming has put the plant at risk and it is now uncommon or locally distributed. This is partly due to changing patterns of agriculture with most wheat now sown in the autumn as
winter wheat and then harvested before any corn cockle would have flowered or set seed. The main reason, however, is that the cereal seed is better cleaned. The plant was believed to be completely
extirpated in the
United Kingdom until 2014, when a single specimen was found growing in
Sunderland by an assistant ranger of the
National Trust. It can be found in fields, roadsides, railway lines, waste places, and other disturbed areas. ==Toxicity==