Capitol Reef National Park
Flora & Fauna
Life is abundant along the banks of the Fremont River. Cotton-woods, willows and tama-risks mingle and compete. All must have enough water, but the exotic tama-risk, introduced into the Southwest from the Mediterranean during the 1930s, is more aggressive. Stealing water from the native plants, the tamarisk crowds them out and diminishes ecological diversity along the river.
Though signs of life are obvious along the Fremont River, scores of plants and animals live in drier areas as well. Piñon pine and Utah juniper grow wherever conditions allow them to gain a foothold. Ponderosa pines, Douglas firs and bristlecone pines grow at some of the higher elevations, often wedging themselves into just a narrow shelf in a stone cliff face.
Mormon-tea, Indian ricegrass, round-leaf buffaloberry, yucca, Gambel oak, virgin's-bower, Utah serviceberry, squawbush and box elder are just a few of the hundreds of plants that can be found within Capitol Reef National Park.
The water pockets themselves are home to numerous plants and animals and things really come alive after a heavy rain. Hours after a flash flood, sandstone pockets, now filled with water, swarm with fairy shrimp. These and other small creatures have hatched from eggs that have been waiting in the dry sand for possibly a year or more. Then begins a seemingly accelerated life cycle. Within a week, the shrimp have hatched, matured, mated and laid their eggs. When the water evaporates, the basin is studded with the dead bodies of shrimp whose lives consisted of growing up at breakneck speed and reproducing themselves. Then their eggs lie dormant for months or years until the rain returns and the cycle is repeated.
The spadefoot toad somehow seems to get more out of life. It too, must mature with lightning speed to reach adulthood before its water source dries up. If water lasts long enough, the lucky, mature toad can bury itself in the sand, protected by a mucous coat, and wait until the next rainfall to get at least a second chance at feeding, mating and loud croaking.
This fleeting, watery community also attracts larger animals that feed and drink here. Especially at night, the ringtail cat, fox and coyote emerge in search of food and water. During the day, lizards, deer, chipmunks and squirrels are commonly seen. Mule deer graze on the orchard grass and trees in the Fremont River Valley, attracting present but seldom-seen cougar.
Capitol Reef In Depth
- Capitol Reef National Park
- 5 Things to See in Capitol Reef
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- Flora & Fauna
- Getting To Capitol Reef
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- In A Nutshell
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- Who's Who at the Park
- Capitol Reef Map
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- Recent Capitol Reef News
News from the Parks
August 28, 2008 - 5:06pm
I used to know exactly how many switchbacks it took to get to Indian Henry's Hunting Ground from Kautz Creek. I have forgotten the number, but there are many. I did remember most of the trail was in the forest, an advantage on a hot day.
August 28, 2008 - 4:58pm
A popular beach on North Carolina's Outer Banks that has been closed to off-road vehicles has been reopened by the National Park Service in time for Labor Day weekend visitors.' The Cape Hatteras National Seashore said Thursday the area known as Bodie Island Spit is open to give fishermen access to Oregon Inlet.
August 28, 2008 - 4:56pm
Longtime Redwood National Park senior biologist Terry Hofstra was awarded the U.S Department of the Interior's second-highest honor Wednesday in Orick. Hofstra though he was going to a party celebrating the park's 40th anniversary -- which is indeed this year -- but instead found himself the focus of the gathering of about 200 park employees and friends.
August 28, 2008 - 4:54pm
Boingo Wireless, the global market leader in Wi-Fi, announces the addition of NomadISP to the Boingo Roaming Network, giving Boingo members access to close to 300 new hotspots located at RV parks, campgrounds and parks throughout the United States and Canada. With the addition of the NomadISP network, Boingo members will be able to enjoy broadband connections as they take their vacations this summer, and whenever they are traveling across North America and staying at a campground or RV park -- either with their laptop computers or their Wi-Fi enabled cell phones.
August 28, 2008 - 4:52pm
The Friends of Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park announced a philanthropic partnership that will establish a proactive and sustainable volunteer program for the 9,100-acre park, which spans two states, three counties, and several cities, towns and neighborhoods.
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