Mountain Holly
Ilex mucronata
- Plant Type
- Shrub (Deciduous)
- Landscape Layer
- Shrub
- Sun
- ☀️ Full Sun, ⛅ Part Sun, ☁️ Shade
- Moisture
- 💧 Regular, 💧💧 High, 💧💧💧 Wet
- Soil
- Loam, Sand, Silt, Rocky / Acidic, Organic / Peat
- Bloom
- May, June
- Sociability
- S2 – Small groups
Pollinator Value
- 🐝 Specialist Bee Host
- Colletes banksi, Colletes brimleyi, Perdita floridensis
S17 3 Ilex-specialist bees in Eastern NA; ranges FL-NC/CT-VA (southern, not ON/QC)
- ❄️ Winter Food Source
- Bright red drupes persist into winter, providing food for American Robin, Eastern Bluebird, Hermit Thrush, Wood Thrush, Swainson's Thrush, Veery, Ruffed Grouse, Wild Turkey, and European Starling. Hemenway lists holly as providing fruit (Fr), winter food (WF), and shelter (Sh) for birds.
Ecology & Conservation
- Proximity Score
- 0
- Native Status
- ✅ Outaouais ❌ Ottawa ✅ QC ✅ ON
- Closest Direction
- Local
- CEC Eco-Regions
- 5 – Northern Forests, 5.2 – Mixed Wood Shield, 5.2.3 – Algonquin/Southern Laurentians
- Rarity Notes
- Not ranked by NatureServe at the subnational level in either Ontario or Quebec. Not listed under SARA. Widespread in suitable wetland habitats across both provinces, with 757 Ontario and 593 Quebec preserved specimens documented.
- Rarity Ranks
- QC SNR – Not Ranked, ON SNR – Not Ranked
- Migration
- Stable
- Ecological Context
- Mountain holly is an obligate wetland shrub characteristic of acidic bogs, peatlands, and swamp margins across the Mixed Wood Shield. In the Outaouais region it occupies the high-shrub zone at bog margins, often alongside Chamaedaphne calyculata and Larix laricina. It occurs in swamps, peatlands, lake shores, and openings in boreal and subalpine forests. Numerous herbarium specimens and GBIF records confirm its presence in ecoregion 5.2.3.
Permaculture & Companion Planting
- Roles
- Fortress/Barrier, Wildlife Habitat
S73/S29/S72 Evidence: Fortress/Barrier: S61 keyword match: thorns? (supporting signal only)] | Wildlife Habitat: S72 Hemenway (tables: 7-2, pp. 116)]
- Notes
- Hemenway lists holly (genus Ilex) in Table 7-2 as providing fruit, winter food, and shelter for birds. Mountain holly pairs well with other wetland shrubs in bog-margin plantings where its persistent fruit complements the ecological functions of associated species.
Edibility & Foraging ℹ
Never ingest a plant unless you have 100% certainty of its identity and have consulted multiple reputable sources. The information provided in the Localeaf Plant Database is compiled from secondary sources for educational and historical purposes only.
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ℹ
Never ingest a plant unless you have 100% certainty of its identity and have consulted multiple reputable sources. The information provided in the Localeaf Plant Database is compiled from secondary sources for educational and historical purposes only.
Click here for more info →❌ Not Edible
Seed Source
- Akène