C4 plants are rare in cool climates, an ecological pattern attributable to their poor photosynthetic performance at low temperatures relative to C3 species. However, some C4 species are able to persist at high latitudes and high elevations, possibly due to the characteristics of the particular microsites they inhabit in these otherwise unfavourable environments. One such species is Muhlenbergia glomerata, which occurs above 60°N in Canada and is found in the atypical C4 habitat of boreal fens. In this study, we evaluate how microsite features affect the success of M. glomerata in boreal fens. We surveyed 19 populations across northern Ontario during the summers of 1999 and 2000. The ground coverage by woody vegetation was the most important parameter affecting the presence or absence of M. glomerata. Woody plants covered over 50% of the ground area in plots where M. glomerata is absent, but less than 20% where it is present. The minimum light intensity threshold for the presence of the C4 species was about 32% of full-sunlight at plant height. Surprisingly, in boreal fens M. glomerata was largely restricted to the wetter moss hollows, rather than occurring on the dry hummocks where its greater water use efficiency might have been advantageous. Woody species dominated the hummocks, but were uncommon in the hollows. In these cool northern climates M. glomerata apparently persists because sufficient periods of temperatures favourable to C4 photosynthesis occur, but this persistence likely requires some factor that suppresses the woody vegetation.