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Marsh Labrador Tea

Rhododendron tomentosum (Stokes) Harmaja

Brief Summary

provided by EOL authors
Ledum palustre is a shrub found in coniferous forests, forest margins, marshes and wet meadows; elevations of occurrence are from 400 to 1400 metres. The species has a very broad distribution that includes northern Europe, North America and Asia. Northern North America occurrences include Greenland, Canada and Alaska. Asian occurrences are in China, Korea and Japan. This shrub thrives in peaty soils, especially in moss and lichen tundra. A specific example ecoregion of occurrence is in the South Hudson Bay taiga, particularly on the floor of Black spruce dominant forests, where there is considerable local topographic depressions that create localised wetlands.

Known by the common name Marsh Labrador tea, this plant exhibits an erect or creeping growtn form and can achieve a height of one half metre. The branches are thin with young branches densely covered with a rusty-coloured wool. Terminal ovoid buds are conspicuous, with scales densely rufous-woolly. Leaf blades are linear, linear-lanceolate, or narrowly oblong. Inflorescences manifest in a multi-flowered form.
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Brief Summary

provided by EOL authors
Rhododendron tomentosum is a shrub found in coniferous forests, forest margins, marshes and wet meadows; elevations of occurrence are from 400 to 1400 metres. The species has a very broad distribution that includes northern Europe, North America and Asia. Northern North America occurrences include Greenland, Canada and Alaska. Asian occurrences are in China, Korea and Japan. This shrub thrives in peaty soils, especially in moss and lichen tundra. A specific example ecoregion of occurrence is in the South Hudson Bay taiga, particularly on the floor of Black spruce dominant forests, where there is considerable local topographic depressions that create localised wetlands.

Known by the common name Marsh Labrador tea, this plant exhibits an erect or creeping growtn form and can achieve a height of one half metre. The branches are thin with young branches densely covered with a rusty-coloured wool. Terminal ovoid buds are conspicuous, with scales densely rufous-woolly. Leaf blades are linear, linear-lanceolate, or narrowly oblong. Inflorescences manifest in a multi-flowered form.
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Rhododendron tomentosum

provided by wikipedia EN

Rhododendron tomentosum (syn. Ledum palustre), commonly known as marsh Labrador tea, northern Labrador tea or wild rosemary, is a flowering plant in the subsection Ledum of the large genus Rhododendron in the family Ericaceae.

Description

It is a low shrub growing to 50 cm (rarely up to 120 cm) tall with evergreen leaves 12–50 mm long and 2–12 mm broad. The flowers are small, with a five-lobed white corolla, and produced several together in a corymb 3–5 cm diameter. They emit strong smell to attract bees and other pollinating insects.

Distribution and habitat

It grows in northern latitudes in North America, Greenland, Canada, and Alaska, in Europe in the northern and central parts, and in Asia south to northern China, Korea and Japan. It grows in peaty soils, shrubby areas, moss and lichen tundra.

Chemical compounds

All parts of the plant contain poisonous terpenes that affect the central nervous system. First symptoms of overdose are dizziness and disturbances in movement, followed by spasms, nausea, and unconsciousness. Among the plant's terpenes is ledol a cyclic alcohol with deliriant effects, although poisonous in large doses.[2][3]

Similar species

This species is not to be confused with the traditionally-used one Rhododendron groenlandicum, found throughout Northern North America.

Uses

Herbal medicine

Rhododendron tomentosum is used in herbalism to make an herbal tea called "Labrador tea". Some schools of homeopathy consider Rhododendron tomentosum to be a specific remedy for puncture wounds produced by sharp-pointed objects or bites. However, no objective material benefit has ever been documented in any properly controlled study to date.

Other uses

Marsh Labrador tea has traditionally been used as a gruit in brewing beer in the Middle Ages.[4] Due to its strong fragrance, it has also formerly been used as a natural deterrent against clothes moths, also mosquitos and bugs in general, in Scandinavia and in Eastern Europe.

References

  1. ^ "Rhododendron tomentosum Harmaja". Plants of the World Online. Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  2. ^ Duke, James A. (2017-12-06), "Handbook of Phytochemical Constituents of GRAS Herbs and Other Economic Plants", Handbook of Phytochemical Constituents of GRAS Herbs and Other Economic Plants, Routledge, pp. 1–654, retrieved 2021-11-29
  3. ^ Herbs of the Northern Shaman: A Guide to Mind-Altering Plants of the Northern Hemisphere.
  4. ^ Buhner, Stephen (1998). Sacred and Healing Herbal Beers. Boulder, CO: Siris Books. p. 169. ISBN 978-0-937381-66-3.

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Rhododendron tomentosum: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Rhododendron tomentosum (syn. Ledum palustre), commonly known as marsh Labrador tea, northern Labrador tea or wild rosemary, is a flowering plant in the subsection Ledum of the large genus Rhododendron in the family Ericaceae.

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cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Wikipedia authors and editors
original
visit source
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wikipedia EN