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Oregon Caves National MonumentThe old-growth Forest during a foggy day.
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Oregon Caves National Monument
Nature & Science
 

Geodiversity Increases Biodiversity

Oregon caves is located in the Siskiyou Mountains, which is part of the Klamath Mountains. This bioregion has among the country’s highest biodiversities of vascular plants (~3,800) and animals (~50,000), more than many tropics!  Per acre, the Monument’s ~500 plants, ~5,000 animals, ~2,000 fungi and over a million bacteria are among the highest anywhere.

The high rate of biodiversity is due to the diverse temperatures, moisture regimes, climates, bedrock, and productivity.  Such habitat diversity favors biodiversity.

The region’s serpentine, caves, cliffs, streams, springs, and granitics seem to be just the right size for diversity, not so large that species can’t speciate from isolation but not too small that extinction is high or migrants can’t find it.

 

Monadenia rothii
Monadenia rothii, Oregon Caves' forest snail
Learn about the endemic woodland snail that only lives near and on the monument.
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Waterfall and pool near the entrance to Oregon Caves.  

Did You Know?
The stream that comes out of the entrance of the cave is a tributary to a watershed that empties into the Pacific Ocean. There are no human-made obstructions that would prevent salmon migration, which makes this the only cave in the National Park Service with an unobstructed link to the ocean.

Last Updated: September 18, 2006 at 09:57 EST