Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 7, No. 2, August 1934
The Ecology of the Garfield
Peak Trail
By Berry Campbell, Ranger-Naturalist
There are two chapters in the story of
Crater Lake: One, that relating to the geological history of the region
- how the mountain was made; the other tells the story of the plant
cover - how this originally bare region came to be clothed with
vegetation. It is this second chapter which we shall here consider.
It is a fact which we may all observe
that nearly any region which has a good soil will have a covering of
vegetation. This vegetation, or plant community, is directly under the
influence of the weather. The species which go to make up this plant
community are dictated largely by the temperature and humidity.
Alexander von Humboldt, many years ago, observed that as one climbed the
high mountains of South America, the vegetable covering came more and
more to resemble the polar forms. In other words, altitude and latitude
acted similarly upon the forest covering - the prime factor being
temperature. More recently this zonation has been painstakingly
investigated on the high mountains in our own country. Not only does the
plant community change with temperature differences, but as one goes
from wet to dry climate, there will be a change from forest to prairie
to desert, though the average temperature may remain about constant.
From these observations, we may draw the conclusion that our final
forest covering at Crater Lake is determined principally by the climate
and that the soil, provided it is adequately rich and deep, is not great
factor.
But there is a long and fascinating
history to the soil and its formation from the bare lava flows of which
Garfield Peak was originally composed. Trees will not grow on bed rock,
nor will bushes nor grass. What then was the first vegetable covering?
Let us then examine the plant covering
of Garfield Peak to see if we can unravel the history of the forest. As
we stand on the switchbacks we note that where bare lava is exposed,
there is only one plant to be found - the lichen. Here is the plant
which is able to grow on the recent flows, and which preceded all other
plants in this volcanic region. This small organism encrusts the cliffs
around the Lake and is responsible for the green patches on Dutton Cliff
and Sentinel Point. Its functions are several: it conserves soil by
collecting dust in the same manner as does a carpet; it sends tiny
rootlets down into the rock and hastens the breaking down of the stone;
and it also enriches the soil by contributing its dead carcass to form
humus or leaf mould.
But we will notice that where the soil
formed by the lichens has collected into crevasses and depressions, the
mosses have invaded. Because of their greater efficiency in wresting a
living from the soil they are able to predominate over the lichens in
all but the exposed places. The mosses, like the lichen collect, form,
and enrich the soil. Because of their size, they carry on these
processes at greater speed. And it is that which is their own undoing,
for if we look carefully, we will see the lowly moss yield to the fern -
its superior in height and complexity. The mosses remain only in the
less favorable situations.
It is not until the cliffs give way to
the steep talus slope that the ferns bow to the sedges and grasses. The
more efficient seeding of the latter plants coupled with ability to
endure dryer soil give them the upper hand on these slopes. The
perennial flowering plants such as the various forms of wild buckwheat,
arnica, bleeding heart, and Indian paint-brush may bee seen to grow in
the grassy places and so they share this stage of succession. The
inroads made by the shrubs into this plant community may well be seen
near the foot of the peak in the region of the first switch-back, for
there the Ocean Spray, Squaw Carpet, pine mat, and currant grows in
profusion and apparently to detriment of the lower forms.
The final plant community, or the
climax community as it may properly be called, is the forest. The first
forest may be seen on the steep hillsides as a mixture of white bark
pine and hemlock. Before optimum conditions were reached one or the
other of these species is thinned out and we find that near the crest of
the ridge the white barked pine exists in almost pure stands, while
below it are unmixed hemlock forests.
What a complicated bit of machinery
Nature puts into motion in order to build a forest! We are inclined to
be impatient when we see that the first stages may well take hundreds of
years. Let us not forget that years mean nothing in the workings of the
universe, and that the human life is but the flicker of a candle
compared to the life of old Mt. Mazama. We are also distressed that this
machinery does not seem to be as precise as the polished automatons
which run our ships or grind out shoes or automobiles. One thing does
not follow another as the textbooks would have it. Many of the stages
are overlapping or run together. A most excellent example of this is to
be seen on the large rock the second switch-back from the summit. Here
we may see lichen, or six varieties, in the greatest of profusion, while
in the crevices the rest of the life history of the forest is written in
complete form. Mosses, ferns, sedges, grasses, flowers, shrubs, pines,
and hemlocks grow all within an area ten feet square. This rock stands
as a summary of the second story of Crater Lake and refreshes the memory
of the traveler on Garfield Peak.