Puneet Varma (Editor)

Ilex glabra

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Aquifoliaceae

Scientific name
  
Ilex glabra

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Aquifoliales

Genus
  
Ilex

Higher classification
  
Holly

Ilex glabra wwwfnpsorgassetsimagesplantsilexglabra5jpg

Similar
  
Holly, Winterberry, Ilex coriacea, American Holly, Clethra alnifolia

How to grow inkberry hollies ilex glabra with detailed description


Ilex glabra, also known as Appalachian tea, dye-leaves, evergreen winterberry, gallberry, and inkberry, is a species of evergreen holly native to the coastal plain of eastern North America, from Nova Scotia to Florida to Louisiana where it is most commonly found in sandy woods and peripheries of swamps and bogs. It typically matures to 5-8’ tall, and can spread by root suckers to form colonies. It normally is cultivated as a shrub in USDA zones 6 to 10.

Contents

Ilex glabra Ilex glabra 39Compacta39 Inkberry Holly Ilex Holly Trees amp Shrubs

Gallberry nectar is the source of a pleasant honey that is popular in the southern United States.

Description

Ilex glabra Ilex glabra Inkberry holly The Home Depot Community

Spineless, flat, ovate to elliptic, glossy, dark green leaves (to 1.5” long) have smooth margins with several marginal teeth near the apex. Leaves usually remain attractive bright green in winter unless temperatures fall below -17 C/0 F. Greenish white flowers (male in cymes and female in cymes or single) appear in spring, but are relatively inconspicuous. If pollinated, female flowers give way to pea-sized, jet black, berry-like drupes (inkberries to 3/8" diameter) which mature in early fall and persist throughout winter to early spring unless consumed by local bird populations. Cultivars of species plants (see for example Ilex glabra 'Shamrock') typically have better form (more compact, less open, less leggy and less suckering) that the species.

Ilex glabra Mt Cuba Center Inkberry Mt Cuba Center

Genus name in Latin means oak in probable reference to the similarity of the holly leaf to the leaf of a Mediterranean oak known as Quercus ilex (holly oak). Species name means smooth in reference to plant leaf surfaces.

Honey

Ilex glabra Ilex glabra Inkberry

Gallberry honey is a highly-rated honey that results from bees feeding on inkberry flowers. This honey is locally produced in certain parts of the Southeastern U. S. in areas where beekeepers release bees from late April to early June to coincide with inkberry flowering time.

Beverage

Dried and roasted inkberry leaves were first used by Native Americans to brew a black tea-like drink, hence the sometimes used common name of Appalachian tea for this shrub.

References

Ilex glabra Wikipedia