Camel's Hump Natural Area


Camel's Hump Natural Area is a protected area in the U.S. state of Vermont. The natural area, wholly contained within Camel's Hump State Park, straddles the ridge of the Green Mountains in Chittenden and Washington counties, in the towns of Duxbury, Huntington, Fayston, Bolton, and Buels Gore. Administered by the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation, Camel's Hump Natural Area is the largest natural area in Vermont.

Description

Camel's Hump Natural Area was created in 1965, with significant additions made in 1969 and 1995. The focal point of the natural area is Camel's Hump, the highest mountain in Camel's Hump State Park. The natural area consists of the following sub-areas:
Altogether Camel's Hump Natural Area covers a total of, making it the largest natural area in the state.

Biodiversity

Camel's Hump Natural Area includes of alpine tundra, one of three such plant communities in Vermont. The natural area also supports an undisturbed subalpine boreal forest of balsam fir, red spruce, and heartleaf paper birch. There are at least 10 species of animals and 24 species of plants in the natural area thought to be rare or very rare. Some of these are protected by the Vermont endangered and threatened species rule, including Boott's rattlesnake-root, bearberry willow, lesser wintergreen, alpine sweetgrass, and squashberry.

History

In 1911, Joseph Battell, a publisher, environmentalist, and philanthropist from Middlebury, donated of forest land surrounding Camel's Hump to the State of Vermont. The deed declared that the "trees growing on the land herein conveyed are not to be cut…and the whole forest is to be preserved in a primeval state." A half century later, in 1965, the state created Camel's Hump Natural Area, a protected area that included a portion of the Battell lands within its boundary.
In 1969, as a by-product of creating Camel's Hump State Park, the State of Vermont designated an ecological area that included all state lands in Camel's Hump Forest Reserve above plus all land in the Gleason Brook watershed above. The ecological area, which was meant "to protect scarce and rare plants, to preserve the natural habitat, and to maintain the wilderness aspect" of the land, expanded Camel's Hump Natural Area to.
In 1995, the State of Vermont acquired the Phen Basin parcel in Fayston. Approximately 80% of the parcel was designated as an Ecological Protection Zone intended to foster the conservation of wildlife, habitats, forestry values, public recreational opportunities, and scenic resources. With the addition of the Ecological Protection Zone, Camel's Hump Natural Area grew to its current size of.