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Beebe Lake and Woods Vegetation Communities
Successional old field
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A meadow on sites cleared, plowed, and then abandoned. The ragweed type
occurs on fields 1 to 3 years after last cultivation; ragweed, daisy, Queen Anne's
lace, crab grass, golden foxtail, and chickweed are common. The goldenrod
subtype occurs 3 - 15 years after last cultivation. Dominant species are perennial
composites: goldenrods and asters. Other herbs include timothy, orchard grass,
smooth brome, bluegrasses, quackgrass, sweet vernal grass, evening primrose,
old-field cinquefoil, wild strawberry, and hawkweeds. Shrubs and trees represent
less than 50% cover but include gray dogwood, arrowwood, raspberries, blackberries, sumac, red maple and white pine.
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Mixed oak forest
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A forest dominated by oaks found on steep south and west facing slopes. Soils
may have calcareous materials at depth. Dominants are red, black, and white oak,
and white pine. Black oak is an indicator of this ecological community type. Pignut
hickory and red maple are usually present. Flowering dogwood and choke cherry
are often abundant in the understory.
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Shale cliff and talus community
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A community with sparse vegetation that occurs on nearly vertical exposures of
shale bedrock, ledges, and talus. The talus is unstable, there is little soil.
Characteristic species include blunt-lobed woodsia, rusty woodsia, hairy penstemon,
herb-Robert, panic grass, Carex pensylvanica, and eastern red cedar.
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Beech-maple mesic forest
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A hardwood forest with sugar maple and beech co-dominant. Found on moist,
well-drained soils, on north and east facing slopes, and on gently sloping hilltops of
any aspect, this ecological community type rarely occurs in ravines. Common
associates are basswood, American elm, white ash, yellow birch, hop hornbeam,
and red maple. Characteristic species in the sub-canopy are musclewood, striped
maple, witch hazel, hobblebush, and alternate-leaved dogwood. There typically are
few herbs and shrubs, but tree seedlings may be abundant. There are many spring ephemerals.
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Hemlock-northern hardwood forest
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A forest that typically occurs on lower slopes of ravines, on cool, mid-elevation
slopes, and at the edges of drainage divide swamps. Hemlock is a co-dominant
species with one to three others: beech, sugar maple, red maple, black cherry,
white pine, yellow birch, black birch, red oak, and basswood. Shrubs have low
abundance, but striped maple may be present. Herbs characteristic of northern and
montane areas are common.
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Oak-beech-hickory-pine type
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A forest usually found on hilltops and south to west facing slopes. Soils are acidic
and well to moderately well drained, but usually have restricted rooting depth due to
fragipan or bedrock. Beech, pine, or aspen may be among the dominant trees and
trees of cool microclimates such as birch, hemlock, and striped and mountain
maples are abundant in this ecological community type. Shrubs and herbs are
abundant and moderately diverse.
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Midreach stream
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The aquatic community of a stream that has a well-defined pattern of alternating
pool, riffle, and run sections. Waterfalls and springs may be present. Typical aquatic
macrophytes include waterweed and pondweeds. Persistent emergent vegetation
is lacking.
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Reservoir/artificial impoundment
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The aquatic community of an artificial lake created by the impoundment of a river,
pond or swamp (Beebe Lake, Lake Treman).
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