Labrador Tea
Rhododendron groenlandicum
- Plant Type
- Shrub (Evergreen)
- Landscape Layer
- Shrub
- Sun
- ☀️ Full Sun, ⛅ Part Sun, ☁️ Shade
- Moisture
- 💧 Regular, 💧💧 High, 💧💧💧 Wet
- Soil
- Rocky / Acidic, Organic / Peat
- Bloom
- May, June, July
- Sociability
- S4 – Large patches
Pollinator Value
- 🔑 Keystone
- Rhododendron supports 50 lepidoptera species regionally as a caterpillar host genus, including notable species such as the green comma (Polygonia faunus), laurel sphinx (Sphinx kalmiae), and io moth (Automeris io). As a dominant bog shrub, it provides critical larval habitat and nectar resources in wetland ecosystems where few other woody species persist.
- 🐛 Larval Host
- Polygonia faunus, Scopula limboundata, Sphinx kalmiae, Hyles lineata, Callosamia promethea, Schizura concinna, Automeris io, Hyalophora cecropia, Orgyia leucostigma, Acronicta tritona, Polygonia gracilis, Polygonia satyrus, Darapsa versicolor
- 🐝 Specialist Bee Host
- Andrena cornelli
S17 Rhododendron genus specialist, CT-NY-PA range
- ❄️ Winter Food Source
- Willow ptarmigan (Lagopus lagopus) consume Labrador tea, with occurrence in 9% of diet samples and 0.5% by weight or volume. The evergreen foliage persists through winter, providing browse for ptarmigan in boreal and subarctic habitats.
S57 Willow Ptarmigan, 9% occurrence, 0.5% wt/vol
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
- Globally secure (G5) with national rank N5 in both Canada and the United States. Ranked S5 in both Ontario and Quebec, indicating no conservation concern. Not listed under SARA or assessed by COSEWIC. Widespread across boreal and subarctic Canada.
- Rarity Ranks
- QC S5 – Secure, ON S5 – Secure
- Migration
- Stable
- Ecological Context
- Labrador tea is a characteristic shrub of acidic bogs, peat-accumulating fens, muskegs, and cold conifer swamps across the boreal and mixed-wood shield. It thrives on saturated sphagnum substrates and in the understory of black spruce and tamarack swamps, often forming dense thickets with leatherleaf (Chamaedaphne calyculata) and sheep laurel (Kalmia angustifolia). In the Gatineau region, it occurs in raised bogs and sphagnum-dominated wetlands such as those found in Gatineau Park.
S6 bogs, spruce forests, muskeg; S7 bogs and conifer swamps; S4 peat bogs, cold damp woods; S48 Gatineau Park specimens
Permaculture & Companion Planting
Medicinal Properties ℹ
Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using any plant for medicinal purposes. The information provided is compiled from secondary sources for educational purposes only.
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ℹ
Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using any plant for medicinal purposes. The information provided is compiled from secondary sources for educational purposes only.
Click here for more info →- Category
- Dermatological
S36 Skin-Conditioning Agent (topical)
- Notes
- Listed in Health Canada's Natural Health Products Ingredients Database as an approved herbal substance. Extract (dry and liquid) from whole plant is classified as a skin-conditioning agent for topical use only. Historically, leaves were brewed as a tea by Indigenous peoples for various traditional purposes.
S36 NHPID approved, topical skin-conditioning; S61 traditional tea use
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 →✅ Edible
- Foraging Notes
- Leaves have been traditionally brewed as tea by Indigenous peoples across northern North America, giving rise to common names such as Hudson's Bay Tea and Muskeg Tea. However, all parts of the plant contain andromedotoxin (grayanotoxin), which is highly toxic. Use as a beverage should be approached with extreme caution.
S61 tea use; S7 tea use in Great Lakes; S4 andromedotoxin warning
Seed Source
- Akène