National Park Service LogoU.S. Department of the InteriorNational Park ServiceNational Park Service
National Park Service:  U.S. Department of the InteriorNational Park Service Arrowhead
Pictured Rocks National LakeshoreBridalveil Falls cascades over the Pictured Rocks escarpment. This springtime waterfall slows to a trickle in the summer.
view map
text size:largestlargernormal
printer friendly
Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore
Trees and Shrubs
This birch tree thrives in the Grand Sable Dunes. Lake Superior is in the background.
NPS photo
Birch tree in the Grand Sable Dunes

Pictured Rocks lies within the northern hardwood/hemlock/white pine region of the eastern deciduous forest. This forest type is transitional between the more homogeneously deciduous forests to the south and the coniferous boreal forests to the north.

About 80 percent of the lakeshore is dominated by upland northern hardwoods. Dominant species are beech (Fagus americanus), sugar maple (Acer saccharum), red maple (Acer rubrum), yellow birch (Betula allegheniensis), hemlock (Tsuga canadensis), and white pine (Pinus strobus).

On coarse outwash and coastal sands (about 10 percent of the Lakeshore), red pine (Pinus resinosa), white pine and jack pine (Pinus banksiana) are dominant. Successional stands within these soils contain considerable amounts of paper birch (Betula papyrifera) and aspen (Populus tremuloides). Ground and crown fires influenced this pine-dominated vegetation prior to European settlement.

Scattered small patches of wetter habitat occur on upland benches and in poorly drained topographic lows (about 10 percent of the Lakeshore). These contain boreal forest elements such as black spruce (Picea mariana), white spruce (Picea glauca), white cedar (Thuja occidentalis), and larch (Larix laricina). Larger white cedar glades within the national lakeshore are southwest of Grand Sable Lake, south of Au Sable Point, along the southern and western edges of Beaver Basin, and east and south of Miners Basin.



Dune grass thrives on the Grand Sable Dunes near Grand Marais, Michigan, in Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore.  

Did You Know?
On October 6, 1972, ceremonies in Munising marked the establishment of Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, America's first national lakeshore. To symbolically link the park's two gateway communities of Munising and Grand Marais, water and sand was poured from two glass containers into a third.
more...

Last Updated: December 04, 2006 at 13:31 EST