Tamarack Swamp Natural Area is a boreal[1] (non-glacial) bog in Sproul State Forest, in Clinton County, Pennsylvania, United States. It is named for the tamarack tree that is common in the surrounding wetland.[2] Numerous other species of plants and animals also inhabit the wetland. The protected natural area consists of 267 acres within the larger Tamarack Swamp complex.[3]

Location and biology

Tamarack Swamp is located in northern Clinton County, Pennsylvania.[4][1] It is northeast of the community of Tamarack, north of the borough of Renovo and close to Pennsylvania Route 144, which in turn passes near the western edge of the wetland.[1][4] The wetland has a total area of 4000 acres.[5] Its elevation is 1,667 feet (508 m) above sea level.[4] Tamarack Swamp serves as the headwaters of Drury Run.[2]

Tamarack Swamp is home to the tamarack tree, which is the only deciduous conifer in Pennsylvania.[2] Most of the trees in it are boreal conifers, though black spruce and balsam fir are also species of trees that live in the wetland.[1][2] Plants living in the wetland include Hooker's orchid, soft-leaved sedge and small floating manna grass.[1][2] Hemlock, Sphagnum mosses, and some Canadian fauna were also found in Tamarack Swamp in the early 1900s, with hemlocks being found as late as 1940.[1]

Tamarack Swamp is considered an Important Bird Area by Audubon Pennsylvania.[2] Bird species in the wetland include Aegolius acadicus, Buteo platypterus, Coccyzus erythropthalmus, Empidonax alnorum, Melospiza georgiana, Myiarchus crinitus, Parkesia noveboracensis, Rallus limicola, and Vermivora chrysoptera. Five rare species of dragonfly are found in the area.[2][3] Black bears live in Tamarack Swamp, as well as red-spotted newts and wood frogs.[3]

Meadows of sedge and the stumps of white pine trees occupy the southern part of Tamarack Swamp. There are also cattails and alders in the southern part of the wetland. The northern borders of the wetland are home to a population of red and white oaks.[1] The carnivorous sundew plant is also found in the wetland.[5]

History

In around 1827, Alexander Kelly, Montgomery Kelly, George Kelly, and Samuel Kelly settled on the western side of Tamarack Swamp.[6] In approximately 1865, James Hennessy discovered several moose antlers buried in the wetland, indicating that moose once lived there.[7] In a 1925 book by Francis R. Cope, Tamarack Swamp was mentioned. Cope referred to the wetland as "a little oasis in the desert...".[1] In the early 1900s, parts of Tamarack Swamp were damaged by logging and development.[1]

Logging was conducted as late as the 1940s, when Hicks Jennings cut down the only remaining virgin spruce in Tamarack Swamp.[8] By 1947, the tamarack and black spruce trees in the wetland were significantly less healthy than they had been around 1900.[9] The bird species olive-sided flycatcher, brown creeper, and winter wren have been extinct in the wetland since 1925.[1] A report from the late 1940s mentioned pitcher plants in the wetland.[9] In the 1990s, the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy added over 9400 acres to Sproul State Forest, including Tamarack Swamp.[2]

Uses

There are plans to develop the Tamarack Swamp area, including plans to drill for oil and natural gas in the wetland.[2] Natural gas pipelines have been laid in the swamp.[1] The land that Tamarack Swamp is situated on has multiple owners.[3]

A Natural Heritage Inventory in 2000 called Tamarack Swap "one of the most unique natural features in [Clinton] county". The United States Forest Service has designated one-third of the wetland as the Tamarack Swamp Natural Area.[1] Tamarack Swamp is named as one of the top 100 birding sites in Pennsylvania by the Pennsylvania Game Commission.[10]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Clinton County, Natural Heritage Inventory (PDF), retrieved February 12, 2014
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Tamarack Swamp, The Western Pennsylvania Conservancy, retrieved February 10, 2014
  3. 1 2 3 4 Clinton County Pennsylvania Visitors Bureau, Special Wild and Natural Areas, archived from the original on December 16, 2014, retrieved February 10, 2014
  4. 1 2 3 Tamarack Swamp, PA, retrieved February 10, 2014
  5. 1 2 Explore Biodiversity in the Tamarack Swamp, Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, archived from the original on February 15, 2014, retrieved February 15, 2014
  6. Kettle Creek, retrieved February 15, 2014
  7. A Pennsylvania Bison Hunt, Middleburg Post Press, 1915, retrieved February 15, 2014
  8. Douglas A. Gross, PENNSYLVANIA BOREAL CONIFER FORESTS AND THEIR BIRD COMMUNITIES: PAST, PRESENT, AND POTENTIAL (PDF), retrieved February 15, 2014
  9. 1 2 Edward J. Reimann (1947), Summer Birds of Tamarack Swamp 1900 and 1947 (PDF), retrieved February 14, 2014
  10. Pennsylvania Game Commission, Pennsylvania's 100 Best Birding Locations, retrieved February 15, 2014

41°25′23″N 77°50′24″W / 41.423°N 77.840°W / 41.423; -77.840

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