Indicator Plants

Rhododendron groenlandicum – Labrador tea

Common Name

Labrador tea

Alternate Common Names
  • bog Labrador tea
Family

Ericaceae

Scientific Name

Rhododendron groenlandicum

Alternate Scientific Name
  • Ledum groenlandicum;
  • Ledum latifolium
Soil Moisture Regime (SMR)
  • Wet (W)
  • Very Wet (VW)
Soil Nutrient Regime (SNR)
  • Poor (P)

Botanical Drawing

Hitchcock, C. Leo, and Arthur Cronquist. Flora of the Pacific Northwest: An Illustrated Manual © 1973. Reprinted with permission of the University of Washington Press.

General / Habitat
  • Evergreen shrub
  • Occurs in bogs and peatlands or any highly acidic/nutrient-poor soils
  • Low to middle elevations
  • Gets its name from the fact that it was brewed into a tea by many aboriginal groups and European traders across Canada
Key Identifying Characteristics
  • Form: highly branched, 0.5-1.5 m tall
  • Leaves: Alternate; narrow and leathery leaves approximately 6 cm long with margins rolled under and rusty hairs beneath
  • Flowers: White with protruding stamens, borne in umbrella-like clusters
  • Fruit: Drooping cluster of hairy capsules
  • Other: Spicy fragrance
Lookalikes
Sources

Douglas, G.W. et al (Editors). 1998-2002. Illustrated Flora of British Columbia, Volumes 1 to 8. B.C. Min. Environ., Lands and Parks, and B.C. Min. For., Victoria, B.C.

Pojar, J. and A. MacKinnon. 2014. Plants of Coastal British Columbia Including Washington, Oregon & Alaska. B.C. Ministry of Forestry and Lone Pine Publishing. Vancouver, B.C.

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