TAXACEAE - Yew Family. |
| Taxus brevifolia Nutt. | Western Yew. |
PINACEAE - Pine Family. |
| Pinus monticola D. Don | Western White Pine. |
| Pinus albicaulis Engelm. | White-barked Pine. |
| Pinus contorta Loud. | Lodgepole Pine. |
| Pinus ponderosa Lawson | Western Yellow Pine. |
| Picea engelmanni. Engelm. | Engelman Spruce. |
| Picea sitchensis (Bong.) Carriere | Sitka Spruce. |
| Tsuga heterophylla (Raf.) Sargent | Western Hemlock. |
| Tsuga mertensiana (Bong.) Sargent | Mountain Hemlock. |
| Pseudotauga taxifolia (LaMarck) Britt. | Douglas Fir. |
| Abies lasiocarpa (Hook.) Nutt. | Alpine Fir. |
| Abies grandis Lindley | Grand Fir. |
| Abies amabalis (Loud.) Forbes | Amabalis Fir. |
| Abies nobilis Lindley | Noble Fir. |
| Thuja plicata D. Don. | Western Red Cedar. |
| Chamaecyparis nootkatensis (Lam.) Sudw. | Alaska Cedar. |
SALICACEAE - Willow Family. |
| Populus trichocarpa T&G | Black Cottonwood. |
| Salix lasiandra Benth. | Gland or Western Black Willow. |
| Salix lasiolepis Benth. | White Willow. |
| Salix mackenziana (Hook.) Barratt | Mackenzie Willow. |
| Salix scouleriana Barratt | Black Willow. |
| Salix sitchensis Sanson | Sitka Willow. |
BETULACEAE - Birch Family. |
| Alnus oregona Watt. | Oregon or Red Alder. |
FAGACEAE - Oak Family. |
| Quercus garryana Dougl. (2) | Garry Oak. |
ROSACEAE - Rose Family. |
| Prunus emarginata (Dougl.) Walp., var. mollis (Dougl.) | Brewer Wild Cherry. |
| Pyrus diversifolia Bong. | Wild Crabapple. |
ACERACEAE - Maple Family. |
| Acer macrophyllum Pursh. | Broadleaved Maple. |
CORNACEAE - Dogwood Family. |
| Cornus nuttallii Aud. | Tree Dogwood. |
ERICACEAE - Heath Family. |
| Arbutas menziesii Pursh. (2) | Madrona. |
(1) Only those species which attain the stature of trees in Mount
Rainier National Park are included. See page 134.
(2) This species has not, as yet, actually been found within the
park. However, during the summer of 1937 several individuals were not ed
just outside the park boundary in the Ohanpecosh district, near where
the Ohanapecosh River cross the park boundary. The trees in question
were so close to the boundary and the conditions within the park were so
similar to those where the trees were growing that it is extremely
likely that a more thorough search will reveal the presence of this
species inside the boundary.