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Published byWilliam Knight Modified over 9 years ago
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Vegetation and Soil Programs Mount Rainier National Park
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Number of plants in park Vegetation Diversity More than 900 species of plants
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*ages- <100 to 1000years *low-elevation - Douglas fir, western hemlock, western red cedar *mid-elevation - silver fir, noble fir, Alaska yellow cedar *high-elevation- subalpine fir, mountain hemlock, whitebark pine, Engelmann spruce Forests
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Subalpine Parklands Mosaic of tree clumps and subalpine meadows Located between forest line and treeline
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Alpine Zone
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Restoration of native systems Monitoring condition Current Vegetation Program
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Program Components: Stabilization and Revegetation of Human Impacts and Control of Introduced Invasive Plants Ecological Restoration of Native Plant Communities Purpose: To restore native plant communities where they have been damaged by human use or are threatened by introduced plant species.
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Ecological Restoration of Native Plant Communities Restoration Components: Recreational Disturbance Post Flood Repair Restoration Federal Highways
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Human Impacts: Types
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Human Impacts
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Meadow Restoration:Before
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Meadow Restoration: After
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Steps in Restoration: Stabilization
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Match surface to adjacent contours Fill Site to Grade Steps in Restoration: Filling
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Steps in Restoration: Erosion Control/Mulching
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Cutting and Seed Collection Volunteer Groups Steps in Restoration: Seed Collection
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Seedling flats
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Greenhouse Propagation of Native Plants Steps in Restoration: Hardening Off
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Steps in Restoration: Transporting Plants
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Steps in Restoration: Planting
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Highway Construction Highway 123 Christine Falls Slump Tipsoo Area Steven’s Canyon
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Highway Construction
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Resource Advisor 52 issues resolved
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Exotic Plant Control Program Components Research/Surveys/Demographic Studies Priority Setting Control/Treatment Effectiveness Monitoring Refinement of Methods Prevention Collaboration
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Exotic Plants: Introduction & Spread
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Prevention Of Spread (vehicle wash)
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Orange hawkweed (Hieracium aurantiacum) Serious threat Limited distribution Difficult to control (but herbicide does appear to be effective)
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Scotch Broom (Cytisus scoparius) Medium threat Narrow distribution Easy control (but seed long-lived)
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St. John’s Wort (Hypericum perforatum) Low/Medium threat Wide distribution Difficult control
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Spotted Knapweed (Centaurea maculosa) Serious threat Narrow distribution Difficult control
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Exotic Plant Control: Methods
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Exotic Plant Control Methods
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Flatpea (Lathyrus sylvestris) Exotic Plant Control Methods
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Exotic Plant Control: Monitoring
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Exotic Plant Control: Collaboration
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Hazard Tree Management Complete Hazard Tree Management Plan Complete initial surveys for all developed zones - 2003 Treat identified hazard trees - site closure, tree removal, conversion to wildlife trees Current Program
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Mitigation Options Move target Temporary site closure Permanent site closure Remove limbs Top tree Remove tree
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Hazard Tree Management
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Ecological Impacts Ohanapecosh Campground
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