Hanging Bog State Preserve Explained

Hanging Bog State Preserve
Iucn Category:V
Map:Iowa#USA
Location:Linn County, Iowa
Nearest City:Palo, Iowa
Area Acre:16
Established:1981
Governing Body:Iowa Department of Natural Resources

Hanging Bog State Preserve is a 16acres forest that is on the edge of the Cedar River valley in Iowa.[1] It was deeded to The Nature Conservancy in 1968, and it became a state preserve in 1981.

The bog has an area that is perennially wet because when water passes through the ground, there is a layer that the water cannot get through, causing the water to surface on a hillside and also form tufa. There are terraces formed by tufa on the lower slopes of the wooded hillsides, which are the namesake of the forest.[2]

Skunk cabbage starts to bloom in the forest when there is still snow. There are over 170 species of plants in the forest, as well as 23 species of bryophytes. Spring wildflowers and ferns can be found in the forest.[3] It also contains sugar maple, basswood, and red oak.[1]

External links

42.033°N -91.767°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: November 1992 . Iowa State Preserves Guide . Iowa Department of Natural Resources . 85.
  2. Web site: The rare skunk cabbage thrives at this preserve in eastern Iowa . The Nature Conservancy . November 26, 2018.
  3. Book: Herzberg, Ruth . 2001 . The Guide to Iowa's State Preserves . University of Iowa Press . 65 . 9780877457749.