Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 20, 1954
Aquatic Flowering Plants of Crater
Lake
By John R. Rowley, Ranger Naturalist,
and Warren Fairbanks, Assistant Park
Naturalist
Frederick V. Coville (1897) reported
that in 1896, "The Lake itself is wholly devoid of aquatic vegetation.
No algae, no mosses, and no aquatic flowering plants were found in its
water." Crater Lake is now known to support a large number of small
(microscopic) animals and plants, and the lake bottom, at depths of 60
to 425 feet, appears almost everywhere to have a thick covering of
mosses. The types of aquatic flowering plants thus far discovered in
Crater Lake, however, are limited to a very small number.
During the summer of 1954, six
different species of flowering plants were observed in the lake. Water
buttercup, Ranunculus aquatilis
L. var. capillaceus (Thuill.) DC., occurred in several large beds
eight to ten feet below the lake surface in the northeastern corner of
Fumarole Bay, on the western side of Wizard Island. One solitary
emergent plant was found close to the shore of the island. This
individual bloomed on August 17.
Water buttercup was collected by Brode
(1938) near this same location in 1935. Until this summer, it was
regarded as the only aquatic flowering plant in Crater Lake.
Two other plants were growing, both
submersed and emergent, in the same part of the lake. A member of the
mustard family, tentatively identified as Pennsylvania bitter-cress,
Cardamine pennsylvanica
Muhl., was rooted as much as a foot below the surface. When first
observed, early in August, none of the fifteen to twenty individuals
found had emergent leaves or stems. Later that month, the leaves of
several plants had extended above the water. High winds in early
September severely damaged these plants, and when last observed, on
September 10, none had flowered. Two plants, however, which had been
transplanted to an aquarium at Park Headquarters produced flowers and
fruits.

Baltic Rush near Wizard Island. Photo by C. Warren
Fairbanks.
This little mustard had an enormous
amount of root development for its size. This feature is undoubtedly
important in its moderate success, thus far, on the rocky and
inhospitable bottom of Crater Lake. The tuber- like root and its many
smaller rootlets were, in fact, not rooted in the usual sense at all but
were merely entwined about these rocks.
Rather extensive groups of a rush,
Juncus balticus Willd., were rooted below the water in at least four
different spots in or adjacent to Fumarole Bay. In each of these areas,
part of the rush growth is above water. This Baltic rush, in common with
most other rushes, multiplies both by seeds and by runners (rhizomes)
under soil or water. Hence, its spread from the damp, semi-aquatic shore
into the water - or vice versa - could be expected. It is likely
that the roots of the highest plants were submersed during the spring
high-water level (cf. Fairbanks, 1954). Both the Baltic rush and the
Pennsylvania bitter-cress are found in several other locations in the
park outside the caldera and are common in wet places along the Pacific
Coast.
At least one species of willow,
Salix coulteri And., and the red elderberry, Sambucus racemosa
L. var. callicarpa
Greene, were occasionally found near and in the water. Both of these are
sometimes considered to be aquatic plants since they are water tolerant;
one Coulter willow is rooted in eight feet of water. There is evidence,
however, that they are being drowned by the increase in water level
since 1940. At that time, the lake was slightly more than fourteen feet
below its present average elevation of 6,176 feet above sea level
(Fairbanks, 1954). There were no young plants noted in the water.
Fennel-leaved pondweed, Potamogeton
pectinatus L., was found growing in abundance on the bottom at
depths of ten to fifteen feet in a channel near the westernmost
extension of the Wizard Island block lava flow into Skell Channel. The
portion of this channel supporting this pondweed would undoubtedly have
been a pool in 1940 when the lake was fourteen feet below its present
level. Since the bottom is now twenty feet below the surface and has a
layer of diatomaceous ooze as much as three inches in thickness on top,
a long period of submersion is suggested.
Sago, or fennel-leaved, pondweed is
cosmopolitan in its distribution, being found in fresh or saline waters
from sea level to 7,000 feet in elevation. Although this plant has not
been observed previously in Crater Lake National Park, its presence now
is not particularly surprising.
This pondweed is considered to be an
important food for waterfowl. There is a small, pea-sized tuber at the
base of its stem. It is abundant in many ponds and lakes, such as Upper
Klamath Lake only a relatively few miles to the southeast. It may,
therefore, be fairly safely assumed that ducks and other water birds
occasionally carry around such plants on their feet. Eventually a
hitch-hiking pondweed could be expected to drop off into Crater Lake in
a location which would provide protection from wind and wave action and
which would supply a sufficiently favorable bottom for its establishment
and reproduction. Of course, it may have arrived in some entirely
different manner.
In this connection, it might be
mentioned that Crater Lake at present has very few areas where the
bottom is both sufficiently shallow and adequately protected to offer a
favorable environment for colonization by aquatic flowering plants. It
is true that a shelf has developed under much of the lake edge at the
base of the rim wall. However, the major factors responsible for the
formation of the shelf -- falling debris from the steep wall above, and
wave action -- tend to deter the successful establishment of plants.
These are undoubtedly among the more important reasons why the waters
adjacent to Wizard Island support most of the aquatic flowering plants
found in Crater Lake. The greater stability of the debris near the shore
of Wizard Island greatly reduces the amount of disturbance caused by
this factor in the underwater shelf around the island. The greater
irregularity of the shore line around Wizard Island - with its small but
numerous inlets, bays, promontories and off-shore islets, especially in
the Fumarole Bay area -- undoubtedly contributes toward a considerable
reduction in the intensity of wave action. These two factors would
therefore tend to produce around the island areas much more favorable to
the establishment of aquatic flowering plants than any area along the
shore of the rim wall.
The concentration of these plants in
the Fumarole Bay area of Wizard Island is no doubt also a result of the
greater accessibility of this western side of the island to plants.
Wizard Island here approaches most closely the wall of the caldera
itself, the distance across Skell Channel at its narrowest being
approximately three hundred feet. The water between the island and the
caldera shore is also at its shallowest in this channel. Changes in lake
level would therefore operate most effectively here in exposing
additional land surface which could act as a passageway for migrating
plants.
It has been suggested many times (Shelford,
1918) that the quantity of plant and animal life increases with the age
of water bodies, especially where the outlet is small. If this is true,
the number of aquatic flowering plants in Crater Lake could be expected
to increase steadily and perhaps quite rapidly. This would be due not
only to the fact that it is a relatively young lake, but also to the
fact that the lake level may remain fairly constant, with the exception
of seasonal variations, for several successive years. This latter factor
would perhaps tend to operate in the same manner as a small outlet and,
in any case, would contribute favorably to the establishment of new
species.
Thus it is possible that Coville's
reference to a complete lack of plants in Crater Lake, although
undoubtedly not strictly true, may have been very nearly so in 1896.
There is ample evidence, from other regions that have been formed by
volcanic eruptions, for radical changes of this sort within a period of
fifty years.
Except for the trees that come down to
the shore line on parts of the caldera wall and on Wizard Island, the
lake appears -- even after some exploration -- to be quite barren. Who
would suspect that from less than one hundred feet to more than four
hundred feet below the surface there grows a lush mat of mosses in every
place in which we have grappled so far? Furthermore, how many would
realize that these mosses harbor an even greater number of smaller
plants -- algae -- and animals?
Specimens of these aquatic plants are
deposited in the herbarium at Park Headquarters, Crater Lake National
Park. Perhaps you would like to know some of them better but will not be
able to meet them first-hand in the lake. You will be welcomed at the
park herbarium if you are particularly interested in these plants.
References
Brode. J. Stanley. 1938. The denizens
of Crater Lake. Northwest Sci. 12(3):50-57.
Coville, F. V. 1897. The August
vegetation of Mount Mazama, Oregon.
Mazama 1(2):170-203.
Fairbanks,. C. Warren. Crater Lake
waters. Nature Notes from Crater Lake 20:31-35.
Shelford, V. E. 1918. Conditions of
existence. In: Ward, H. B., and G. C. Whipple. Fresh-water
Biology. New York, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ix, 1111 pp.