You are here

Yellowstone National Park Thermal Regions Harbor Rare Plants

Share

Editor's note: Ruffin Prevost, editor of the Yellowstone Gate blog, writes on all things Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks.

Gift shops in and around Yellowstone National Park are filed with postcards, videos and guidebooks featuring grizzly bears and gray wolves. But you'™d be hard-pressed to find a photograph'”or even a passing mention'”of three much rarer species found only in Yellowstone.

Thanks in part to unique microclimates created by the park'™s hot springs, fumaroles and other thermal features, Yellowstone is the only place on Earth where you'™ll find Ross'™s bentgrass, Yellowstone sand verbena, and Yellowstone sulfur wild buckwheat.

But most visitors to the park will never see these obscure plants.

Roy Renkin, Yellowstone'™s vegetation management specialist, said that 'œplants are taken for granted here, mostly because they'™re not as showy' as a baby bison, bugling elk or even a leaping trout.

'œBut they'™re important,' Renkin said, describing not just the three species that grow only in relatively small sections of the park, but more widespread flora like whitebark pine.

Alternate Text
Yellowstone sand verbana is found only along the shores of Yellowstone Lake/NPS

According to Yellowstone Resources and Issues Handbook, Yellowstone is home to more than 1,300 species of vegetation'”an amazingly diverse array of hardy plants that were able to repopulate the park after glaciers, lava flows, and other cataclysmic changes.

That includes hundreds of different wildflowers, but also seven species of conifers and 218 non-native species.

'œThere'™s a history why they'™re here, and trying to understand them opens a wealth of information,' Renkin said of Yellowstone'™s many plant species. 'œSo it behooves us to pay attention.'

Unlike prowling animals, vegetation stays put, making rare plants easier to find and photograph. But most visitors aren'™t interested in taking even a short hike to view, for instance, Yellowstone sand verbena.

Endemic to Yellowstone, the nondescript plant has sticky green leaves and small white flowers that rarely extend beyond three inches above the sandy soils where it is found.

Yellowstone sand verbena grows only on a 1.5-acre spot along the shore of Yellowstone Lake, not too far from a popular hiking trail, Renkin said. The plant thrives in warm soil, which may mean that it is aided by the park'™s peculiar thermal environment.

Ross'™s bentgrass, which grows just a few inches tall and flowers in early spring, is found only around geysers and thermal features in the Shoshone Geyser Basin and along the Firehole River drainage.

The plant grows only at 'œvapor dominated sites' like cracks in thermal areas or the walls of hot springs. Ross'™s bentgrass requires just the right combination of warmth and moisture, conditions described by botanists as a 'œnatural greenhouse.'

Yellowstone sulfur buckwheat grows only in the geyser basins along the west side of the park. Most of the more than 250 wild buckwheat varieties grow in dry areas of the Rocky Mountains. Taxonomists are still debating how different Yellowstone'™s specific variety is from other wild sulfur buckwheats, Renkin said.

Alternate Text
Roy Renkin, a vegetation specialist with the National Park Service, points out sections of a forest in Yellowstone National Park that were the subject of a prescribed burn in 2007 during a 2008 media tour looking back at the summer fires of 1988/Ruffin Prevost

Renkin said none of Yellowstone'™s vegetation is listed as a threatened or endangered species, but managers have the option to close trails or curtail human activities that might be detrimental to endemic plants.

In 2011, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined that protection under the Endangered Species Act was warranted for the whitebark pine, found above 7,000 feet across much of Yellowstone and in other areas across the Rocky Mountains. But the species was precluded from listing 'œby the need to address other listing actions of a higher priority,' the agency said.

Important as a food source for grizzly bears and in controlling erosion by slowing runoff from melting snow, whitebark pine faces threats from fire, climate change, the mountain pine beetle and white pine blister rust, a fungus that reduces the tree'™s resistance to beetles.

Despite its importance across the region, more research is needed to determine how whitebark pine trees are established among rival lodgepole pines, particularly after wildland fires, Renkin said.

'œThere are some real information gaps relative to whitebark pine here in the Yellowstone ecosystem,' he said.

After decades working in Yellowstone, Renkin said he is always impressed with how the landscapes recovers after fires, changes in waterways and reclamation from past development.

'œIt'™s really dramatic what happens when you let Mother Nature express herself,' Renkin said. 'œIt'™s amazing how resilient she can be.'

Add comment

CAPTCHA

This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

The Essential RVing Guide

The Essential RVing Guide to the National Parks

The National Parks RVing Guide, aka the Essential RVing Guide To The National Parks, is the definitive guide for RVers seeking information on campgrounds in the National Park System where they can park their rigs. It's available for free for both iPhones and Android models.

This app is packed with RVing specific details on more than 250 campgrounds in more than 70 parks.

You'll also find stories about RVing in the parks, some tips if you've just recently turned into an RVer, and some planning suggestions. A bonus that wasn't in the previous eBook or PDF versions of this guide are feeds of Traveler content: you'll find our latest stories as well as our most recent podcasts just a click away.

So whether you have an iPhone or an Android, download this app and start exploring the campgrounds in the National Park System where you can park your rig.