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Rocky Mountain National Park - Alpine Ecosystem


Upper Beaver Meadows

Access to "the land above the trees" is the single most distinctive aspect of Rocky Mountain National Park. Trail Ridge Road, the highest in any national park, transports you easily to this realm of open sky, tiny but brilliant flowers, and harsh climate. Approximately one-third of this national park is above the limit where trees may grow in northern Colorado.

The Alpine Ecosystem starting at elevations from 11,000 to 11,500 feet, depending on exposure, is an area of extremes. Strong, frequent winds and cold temperatures help limit what plants can grow there. Most alpine plants are perennials. Many plants are dwarfed, but their few blossoms may be full-sized. Cushion plants, looking like ground-hugging clumps of moss, escape the strong winds blowing a few inches above them. Cushion plants may also have long taproots extending deep into the rocky soil. Many flowering plants of the tundra have dense hairs on stems and leaves to provide wind protection or red-colored pigments capable of converting the sun"s light rays into heat. Some plants take two or more years to form flower buds, which survive the winter below the surface and then open and produce fruit with seeds in the few weeks of summer.

Where tundra soil is well-developed, grasses and sedges are common. Non-flowering lichens cling to rocks and soil. Their enclosed algal cells can photosynthesize at any temperature above 32° F, and the outer fungal layers can absorb more than their own weight in water. The adaptations for survival of drying winds and cold may make tundra vegetation seem very hardy, but in some respects the tundra is very fragile. Repeated footsteps often destroy tundra plants, leaving exposed soil to blow away, and recovery may take hundreds of years.

Plants and Animals of the Alpine Ecosystem

Shrubs:
Willow

Grasses and Grasslike Plants:

Alpine Blue Grass

Alpine Timothy

Skyline Blue Grass

Spike Trisetum

Tufted Hair Grass

Spreading Wheatgrass

Kobresia

Spike Wood-Rush

Pyrennian Sedge

Forbs:

Alpine Avens

Queen"s Crown

Alpine Bistort

marsh marigold

American Bistort

Mertensia

Pygmy Bitterroot

Rydbergia

Snow Buttercup

Alpine Paintbrush

Dwarf Clover

Alpine Phlox

Parry"s Clover

Moss Pink

One-Headed Daisy

Alpine Sandwort

Black-Headed Daisy

Saxifrage

Elephantella

Sky Pilot

Alpine Forget-Me-Not

Alpine Sorrel

Arctic Gentian

Alpine Wallflower

king"s crown

Blue Columbine
Birds:

Prairie Falcon

White-Tailed Ptarmigan

rosy finch

Common Raven

Horned Lark

White-Crowned Sparrow

Water Pipit

Mammals:

Badger

Snowshoe Hare

Bobcat

Mountain Lion

Chipmunk

yellow-bellied marmot

Coyote

Pine Marten

mule deer

Deer Mouse

Elk

Pika

Long Tailed Weasel

Pocket Gopher

red fox

Vole

Bighorn Sheep

Bushy-Tailed wood rat

Ground Squirrels

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Rocky Mountain National Park - Alpine Ecosystem

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