Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 17, 1951
Additions to the Flora
By James Kezer, Ranger-Naturalist

A bog in the vicinity of Crater Spring.
(CRATER LAKE NATIONAL
PARK - 1951)
One of the exciting experiences of the
1951 season was the discovery of a large area of sphagnum bogs in the
northwestern part of the park It is not surprising that ten plants
previously unknown from the park were found in this new and distinctive
kind of habitat.
On the evening of September 14,
Lawrence Bisbee, Fred Larmie and I explored a remote and seldom visited
region of the park south of Crater Spur Motorway in search of a pond
that had been reported in 1937 by Dr. Applegate. About one-quarter mile
south of the motorway spur we entered an extensive, beautiful, wet
montane meadow that was characterized by boggy areas covered with
sphagnum moss. Although exact measurements were not made, we estimated
that the meadow extended over at least ten or fifteen acres.
To the northeast, it was bounded by a
row of alpine firs below which was a hedge of willows that looked as
though it had been planted and clipped. Growing abundantly in the
sphagnum was a carnivorous plant, mountain bladderwort, Utricularia
intermedia Hayne, its yellow flowers forming patches of color on the
surface of the bog. Another species of bladderwort, U. vulgaris,
L., was collected from several small bog ponds which comprised an
interesting aspect of this boggy meadow. The bladderworts utilize small,
intricately constructed bladder-like traps as an animal-catching
mechanism. Growing in the sphagnum with the mountain bladderwort, their
leaves forming patches of red, were two other species of carnivorous
plants, round-leaved sundew,
Drosera rotundifolia L., (previously known in the park only from
Copeland Meadow) and long-leaved sundew, D. longifolia L. The
sundews have glandular hairs on their leaves which provide them with a
flypaper-like secretion in which small animals become entrapped. In the
ponds with the bladderwort was a pondweed, Potamogeton pusillus
L., and in the nearby wet sphagnum were a few plants of the marsh
cinquefoil, Comarum palustre L.
A number of days later, I returned to
Crater Spring and hiked along the northern side of the creek toward the
western boundary of the park. A very short distance from the spring I
entered another boggy meadow that extended at least one-half mile along
the creek. In nearly every respect it was similar to the sphagnum meadow
that had been previously discovered; however, it contained a bog pond
that differed considerably from those present in the meadow south of
Crater Spur Motorway. This was a body of water about 120 feet in
diameter, surrounded by a floating mat of vegetation which extended into
the pond as its bottom. The mat of vegetation was so fragile that it
would not support my weight and it made collecting in the pond extremely
difficult. An abundant growth of sedges and aquatic plants protruded
through the water's surface, leaving only small patches of open water.
Buckbean, Menyanthes trifoliata
L., was growing in the sphagnum around the pond with marestail,
Hippuris vulgaris L., and the floating pondweed, Potamogeton
natans L., conspicuous in the water among the sedges. A small
burr-reed Sparganium minimum Fries, was also growing in the pond.
At the edge of the water, in the mud of the floating mat of vegetation,
were a few clumps of stick-tight, Bidens cernua L.
It is highly probable that a more
detailed exploration of these two areas will yield other plants that
have not been reported from the park.
It should be emphasized that the areas
in which these new plants were found represent a totally new habitat for
the park. Sphagnum bogs were previously unreported within the boundaries
of the park; furthermore, the park contains only one permanent pond
(discussed elsewhere in this issue of Nature Notes) other than these
Crater Creek bog ponds. There can be no doubt that these newly
discovered bogs and ponds, with their distinctive plants and animals,
add to the biological significance of this magnificent National Park.