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Ecoregions
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WEATHER
Forested Hills and Mountains
Ecoregion
in
Appalachian Mountains
in
WV
,
PA
,
MD
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The Forested Hills And Mountains ecoregion occupies the highest and most rugged parts of Ecoregion 69 and is extensively forested. Its highly dissected hills, mountains, and ridges are steep sided and have narrow valleys. Crestal elevations are often 1,800 to 2,600 feet (549-793 m) and reach their maximum, about 4,600 feet (1,402 m), in West Virginia. Resistant sandstone and conglomerate of the Pennsylvanian Pottsville Group, sandstone of the Mississippian Pocono Formation, and sedimentary rocks of the Mississippian Mauch Chunk formations are commonly exposed at the surface and typically have a gentle dip. In some places, however, the strata have been gently folded into a series of northeasterly trending ridges that reach an elevation of 3,200 feet (975 m). These anticlinal ridges, Chestnut Ridge, Laurel Mountain, and Negro Mountain, form a transition between the relatively undeformed Western Allegheny Plateau (70) and the folded and faulted Ridge and Valley (67) (Ciolkosz and others, 1984, p. 9). Broad Top Mountain, Pennsylvania is an outlier of the Forested Hills and Mountains (69a) that is surrounded by Ecoregion 67; its lithology and surface topography resemble Ecoregion 69a despite its geographical position (Guilday, 1985, p. 23). Local relief varies widely; on mountain bogs (glades), topography can be almost flat, whereas adjacent to watergaps, such as the Conemaugh River Gorge, local relief can exceed 1,300 feet (396 m). The eastern woodrat (Neotoma floridana), found on the cliff faces and boulder piles of water gaps, has been classified as threatened in Pennsylvania (Genoways, 1985, p. 362). Cool water, steep-gradient streams and waterfalls occur and have a less diverse fish population than those nearer the Ohio River. Characteristically, the streams of Ecoregion 69a do not have much buffering capacity and many reaches, including some not affected by mine drainage, are too acidic to support fish (R. Webb, Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, written communication, 1995).
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EPA
Plants
Reed Canarygrass
Phalaris arundinacea (species),
“Reed-Grass”
101
Observations
JAN - DEC
Mountain Laurel
Kalmia latifolia (species),
“Calico-Bush”, “Spoonwood”, “American Laurel”, “Clamoun”, “Ivybush”, “Lambkill”, “Sheep Laurel”
74
Observations
JAN - DEC
Liriodendron tulipifera
SPECIES ·
“Tuliptree”, “Yellow Poplar”
69
Observations
JAN - DEC
Great Laurel
Rhododendron maximum (species)
62
Observations
JAN - DEC
Virginia Creeper
Parthenocissus quinquefolia (species)
50
Observations
JAN - DEC
See All
Animals
Red-Backed Salamander
Plethodon cinereus (species),
“Eastern Red-Backed Salamander”, “Red Back Salamander”
111
Observations
JAN - DEC
Eastern Newt
Notophthalmus viridescens (species)
99
Observations
JAN - DEC
Allegheny Mountain Dusky Salamander
Desmognathus ochrophaeus (species)
49
Observations
JAN - DEC
Northern Slimy Salamander
Plethodon glutinosus (species),
“Slimy Salamander”
38
Observations
JAN - DEC
American Toad
Anaxyrus americanus (species)
32
Observations
JAN - DEC
See All
Birds
American Crow
Corvus brachyrhynchos (species)
24,099
Observations
JAN - DEC
American Robin
Turdus migratorius (species)
22,439
Observations
JAN - DEC
Blue Jay
Cyanocitta cristata (species)
20,477
Observations
JAN - DEC
Song Sparrow
Melospiza melodia (species)
18,202
Observations
JAN - DEC
Black-Capped Chickadee
Poecile atricapillus (species),
“Parus Atricapillus”, “Poecile Atricapilla”
17,797
Observations
JAN - DEC
See All
Insects
Monarch Butterfly
Danaus plexippus (species),
“Monarch”, “Milkweed”, “Common Tiger”, “Wanderer”, “Black Veined Brown”, “Common Tiger Wanderer”
196
Observations
JAN - DEC
Pterophylla camellifolia
SPECIES
16
Observations
JAN - DEC
Papilio glaucus
SPECIES ·
“Eastern Tiger Swallowtail”
15
Observations
JAN - DEC
Bombus impatiens
SPECIES ·
“Common Eastern Bumblebee”
12
Observations
JAN - DEC
Ebony Jewelwing
Calopteryx maculata (species)
11
Observations
JAN - DEC
See All
Fungi
Leotia lubrica
SPECIES
11
Observations
JAN - DEC
Turkey-tail Mushroom
Trametes versicolor (species)
10
Observations
JAN - DEC
Umbilicaria mammulata
SPECIES ·
“Navel Lichen”
9
Observations
JAN - DEC
Laetiporus sulphureus
SPECIES ·
“Crab-of-the-Woods”, “Chicken-of-the-Woods”, “Sulphur Polypore”, “Sulphur Shelf”
8
Observations
JAN - DEC
Scleroderma citrinum
SPECIES
7
Observations
JAN - DEC
See All
Taxonomy
Region
49
Ecoregion
Classified As
Ecoregion
Forested Hills and Mountains
Forested Hills and Mountains
Forested Hills and Mountains
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