Wildflower Wonders at Niquette Bay
Join Vermont State Parks for the grand opening of Niquette Bay State Park on Saturday, May 4th and Sunday, May 5th. As Park Staff prepared for the
park season, Niquette Bay State Park began filling with spring wildflowers.
Niquette Bay State Park houses many wildflower colonies that put on a beautiful
show for just a few weeks this time of year.
Learn what makes these short-lived beauties so special and what types
of flowers you might find!
What are Spring Ephemerals?
These are unique early blooming wildflowers that grow, flower, and seed
all in the very short 6-8 week window before the shade from leaf trees covers
the forest floor. By the time deciduous
trees have leaves, these flowers will be gone.
Where do they grow?
The best location to find these is in a predominately hardwood,
deciduous forest with large trees and little undergrowth. They can grow very well on rocky ledges in
less than ideal soil conditions. These plants are usually very small and begin
growing under the cover of leaves from the previous year. These plants begin
growing before the last snow has melted!
How do they spread?
Ephemerals are perennials. This means that the plant may live for
several years, IF it is undisturbed and has favorable growing conditions. Each year it completes a cycle of growth,
flower, seed, and then die-back to the ground at the end of its season to wait
for the next year.
Ephemerals have a special way to spread their seeds. The plants grow a
tasty, fat-filled part that attracts ants. Ants will carry the seeds back to
their nests up to a few meters away, the young ants then eat the fatty part,
and the ants discard the seed. A new
plant may germinate the following year from the discarded seed. This is how colonies of Ephemerals form.
Can we pick the flowers or take
the plants?
No. Aside from collection being illegal, these beauties are best left
in nature. Once the flower is picked, it cannot produce a seed to grow a new
plant the following year. Removing a
plant stops the process; that plant is gone from its native habitat forever,
and so are any future flowers it may produce that would go to seed in that
location.
Are any of these rare or
endangered plants in Vermont?
ABSOLUTELY! Many rare and endangered species live at Niquette Bay State
Park. Some Spring Ephemerals live in
colonies that are over 300 years old.
Did you know that it takes up to two years for a Trillium seed to
germinate, and then in optimal conditions, another 7-10 years for the plant to
flower? Spring Beauty (Claytonia virginica) is so rare, that there are less
than 5 high quality occurences in the entire State of Vermont. This plant lives here in the Park, along with
many others that are classified as rare and endangered.
Once an Ephemeral colony is gone, it is exceptionally rare that it will
ever return. Please help protect these wild gems!
What should we do to help
protect these fragile species?
- Stay on the trails, admire from a distance, do not disturb the plant colonies if at all possible.
- Keep dogs under control and away from wildflower colonies; it may be rare or endangered.
- Pick up all dog feces no matter where they land; feces are highly concentrated with nitrogen and phosphorus and will kill plants, not fertilize them.
- Never pick a native wildflower or remove the plant.
Last year a "one in a million" white trillium was found at Niquette Bay State Park. These plants flower every one or two years and typically have three petals. This mutant flower had an incredible 15 petals. Head on out to Niquette Bay and see if you can spot these incredible flowers!
Have any images or videos of your wildflower adventures in Vermont
State Parks? Make sure to share them to our Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter
accounts with #VermontStateParks. What are your favorite spring wildflowers?
Share in the comments below!
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