Plant Communities (continued)
ABOVE TIMBERLINE
Above the Subalpine Zonetimberline marks its
lower limitlies the Alpine, or Arctic-Alpine, Zone. This is the
distinctive "Land of Lilliput" of the plant kingdom, where nearly all
existing plant species are in dwarf form. Some of the zone is barren
rock, with only algae and lichen growth. Vast expanses of it, however,
are covered with a cold, wet soil mantle which, during the brief
summertime, presents a myriad of low, cushionlike flower clumps.
Sometimesusually throughout Julythe effect is that of a vast
carpet of flowers. The list of plant species is great. Showiest of the
alpine flowers are the ALPINE BUTTERCUP (Ranunculus adoneus),
with large, yellow, poppy-like flowers, often blooming at the very edges
of snowbanks; the ALPINE FORGET-ME-NOT (Eritrichium argenteum),
which grows in dense, low clumps and presents thick patches of
bright-blue flowers; the MOSS SILENE, or MOSS CAMPION (Silene
acaulis), a mosslike cushion plant with pink flowers (also found in
Greenland and Alaska); the GRAYLOCKS ACTINEA (Actinea
grandiflora), sometimes called "Old Man of the Mountain," with
bright-yellow flower heads, usually wind blown and ragged, almost as
broad as the plant is tall; the TUFTED PHLOX (Phlox caespitosa),
better known here as alpine phlox, the cushion of which is sometimes
entirely covered with pale-blue or white flowers; the BISTORT
(Polygonum bistortoides), with dense spikes of tiny white flowers
standing like miniature bottle brushes above the tundra grasses; the
KINGS CROWN (Sedum integrifolium), a fleshy plant with dark-red
blossoms, the whole plant often turning completely red in late summer;
and the MOUNTAIN DRYAD (Dryas octopetala), with its curious
8-petalled, cream-colored flowers.
TIMBERLINE IS AT ABOUT 11,500 FEET ALTITUDE NEAR
TRAIL RIDGE ROAD.
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The manner in which these plants have adjusted
themselves to their harsh environment is a fascinating storyone
told effectively by the ranger naturalists in the high-country conducted
trips which the National Park Service offers in summer. Some plants have
coverings of soft "fur," others store liquids in fleshy parts, while
still others have a hard outer coat. These adaptations protect them from
loss of vital fluids due to the cold, dry air of these high altitudes.
Reduced size also helps to conserve the energies of the plant; the dwarf
willows, for example, have stems scarcely longer than the seed catkins
they bear. These plants must condense their year's active life into the
short spanas little as 5 weeks-of the growing season.
The story of the park's trees and flowers is
intensely interesting, but can best be understood by more careful study
than is possible in this brief handbook. Several excellent botanical
bulletins are available for the more interested visitor, and we urge you
to invest in one of them.
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