The genus appears to be able to occupy widely different habitats as long as its requirements for water are met.
Habitat fragmentation severely affects dioecious species like
Lindera melissifolia (pondberry), because populations with plants of a single sex can only vegetatively reproduce. With significant habitat loss, plants become ever more isolated, lessening the likelihood that pollinators will travel from male to female plants. Most are found on the bottoms and edges of shallow seasonal ponds in old dune fields, but in drier areas they occur in low riverine habitat. Most
Lindera colonies occur in light shade beneath a forest canopy, but a few grow in almost full sunlight. In warmer areas they occur in bottomland hardwood forests. The North American species of
Lindera are relicts that originally were more common when the climate of North America was more humid, and they are not so widespread geographically as in the past. The
hermit thrush has been identified as a dispersal agent of seeds of
L. melissifolia.
Lindera species are used as food plants by the
larvae of some
Lepidoptera species, including
the engrailed and the
spicebush swallowtail. ==Species==