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Shenandoah National ParkBright orange butterfly weed blossoms.
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Shenandoah National Park
Plants
 

Shenandoah National Park is home to a wonderful variety of plant life. The park’s Mid-Atlantic location straddles conditions of both the Northern and Southern Appalachian mountains allowing everything from algae to oaks to thrive. Over 1300 species of vascular plants are found in the park, though fewer than one hundred of these are the familiar trees and shrubs most noticeable to park visitors.

The forests within Shenandoah National Park are generally classified as "oak-hickory", yet they contain far more than just oak and hickory trees to discover. The park’s 70 mile length and 3500 foot elevation range create numerous habitats able to support a variety of forest cover types. Some of the strongest influences determining what plants grow in certain areas of Shenandoah National Park are the available moisture, growing season length, temperature, and soil conditions. Chestnut and red oak forest are common in the park, but other forest types such tulip poplar, cove hardwood, and even small areas of spruce-fir forest, may also be found when exploring the park’s peaks, steep hillsides, and sheltered stream valleys.

Forest names such as cove hardwood and chestnut oak are only a starting point to describe the variety of plants present within Shenandoah National Park. The forests would be incomplete without the seemingly countless herb, fern, and shrub species found beneath the trees. Trillium, jack-in-the-pulpit, interrupted fern, blueberries, azaleas, and lady slipper orchids are just a few examples of the numerous smaller species that enrich the understory. Explorations into the forests of Shenandoah National Park provide tremendous opportunities for discovery to both the casual and serious botanical enthusiast..

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Species lists
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Learn about our Science and Natural Resources Program
Science & Natural Resource Stewardship
Learn about scientific research & natural resource stewardship in the park.
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Closeup photograph of the tiny fuschia blooms of hepatica.  

Did You Know?
Hepatica is usually the first of many native wildflowers to bloom in the spring in Shenandoah National Park.
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Last Updated: July 25, 2006 at 00:31 EST