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Acadia National ParkBirch Trees
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Acadia National Park
Plants
 
Sea lavender
Acadia NP photo
Sea lavender

There has been a long history of botanical exploration in and around Acadia National Park. In the late 1880s, students from Harvard University made their way to Acadia from Boston via train and steamship each summer in search of the unique plants found in bogs, on mountain summits and the many habitats in between. The Champlain Society, as they called themselves, published "Flora of Mount Desert Island, Maine," authored by Rand and Redfield, in 1894. This benchmark publication cataloged vascular plants, mosses, algae and lichens.

Acadia has more than 1,100 vascular plant species that represent a wide diversity of plant life adapted to thrive in acidic, low nutrient bogs and rocky, treeless mountain summits. Grasses and wildflowers abound in park meadows, and lakes and ponds are home to emergent and floating aquatic vegetation.

Almost one quarter of Acadia's flora is non-native, and about 25 species are state-listed rare plants. It is evident that 300 years of human settlement and land use have changed the composition of plant communities throughout Acadia National Park.

Acadia NP Resource Management
Acadia NP Resource Management
Preserving the integrity of natural and cultural resources, and quality visitor experiences.
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Schoodic Education and Research Center
Schoodic Education and Research Center (SERC)
Facilitating research and education throughout Acadia National Park
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From atop Cadillac Mountain, the sun is just starting to rise over the Porcupine Islands.  

Did You Know?
Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park is the tallest mountain along the eastern coast of the United States. During certain times of the year, it is the first place in the U.S. to see sunrise.

Last Updated: December 28, 2007 at 10:31 EST