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Olympic National ParkCampsite on Elwha River
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Olympic National Park
Lowland Forests
 
looking striaght up with three furrowed old growth tree trunks converging high above
View up into old growth Douglas-fir canopy.

Imagine a living organism 30 stories tall and wider than two parking spaces. It is humbling to stand amidst such giants in the ancient forests of Olympic National Park. The Olympic Peninsula lowlands, with their mild climate, deeper soils and generous rainfall grow world record trees. These old survivors record centuries of history in their massive trunks.

What is old growth forest?
Though there are old groves of subalpine firs, and huge trees amid the temperate rain forest in the park, when scientists use the term old growth, they are usually referring to Douglas-fir/western hemlock forests with these characteristics:

  • Trees older than about 200 years
  • Abundant downed wood on the ground
  • A multi-layered canopy
  • Standing dead trees called snags

Value of the Forest
What is the value of a tree, a forest? A tree might have so many board feet and thus be worth a certain amount to a homebuilder. Or a tree might be the only in the area with branches wide enough for a marbled murrelet to lay her egg on. Or a group of trees might anchor the soil on a slope above a town, or above a drinking water supply. Or a tree and its neighbors might filter the air, taking in carbon dioxide we’ve added to our atmosphere and helping to store it harmlessly, locked up in its woody tissue. In Olympic, you can walk the lowland forest and answer that question for yourself.

Where To See Lowland, Old Growth Forests
Explore the Sol Duc or Elwha valleys, or trails at Lake Crescent. Or visit the forest around Staircase in the southeast corner of the park.

 
many large straight red-brown tree trunks with green lacy understory trees below
Old growth forest with deeply furrowed bark on older Douglas-firs and lacy western hemlocks below.

Common Trees
Douglas-fir – Pseudotsuga menziesii
Western hemlock – Tsuga heterophylla
Western redcedar – Thuja plicata
Grand fir – Abies grandis
Sitka spruce – Picea sitchensis (primarily westside rain forests)

Common Shrubs
Coast red elderberry – Sambucus racemosa
Huckleberries – Vaccinium sp.
Ocean spray - Holodiscus discolor
Oregon grape – Berberis nervosa
Salal – Gaultheria shallon

Common Understory Plants
Bleeding heart – Dicentra formosa
Violets – Viola sp.
Star flower – Trientalis borealis
Sword fern – Polystichum munitum
Trillium – Trillium ovatum
Twinflower – Linnaea borealis
Vanillaleaf – Achlys sp.
Youth-on-age – Tolmeia menziesii

brown owl with spots on lichen-draped branch
A Rare Refuge
What species depend on old growth forest to survive?
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Mossy downed log in dense forest  

Did You Know?
The old growth forests of the Pacific Northwest produce three times the biomass (living or once living material) of tropical rain forests.
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Last Updated: July 26, 2006 at 16:47 EST