Sunday, 8 November 2015

Visiting Taiwan--Wild is Close By

Taiwan is a small and densely populated island (link), but it has high mountains in the center and those mountains are so rugged that that they remain wild. Because it is a small island, access to wild Taiwan is surprisingly easy. You can, for example, take a city bus from downtown Taipei, Taiwan's capital, to Yangmingshan Park, hike for the afternoon and take the bus back to the city center, or start from there on a backpack adventure through the mountains of central Taiwan.

Taiwan


I was led by Neil Wade of Taiwan Adventures who normally takes people on more energetic hikes, but seemed content to show me around.

From the Yangmingshan Park parking lot, an easy trail led through a pleasant forest

Taiwan

There were handsome stands of ferns

ferns, Taiwan

It was February, spring time, and the plants were putting on new growth. The fiddleheads will open into new fern fronds. 
new ferns, Taiwan

The trails lace all over the mountains

Taiwan

Some places it seemed a familiar north temperate forest

Yangmingshan Park, Taiwan

and then we'd see a tree fern!

Yangmingshan Park, Taiwan
tree fern
Once, in the Age of Dinosaurs (Mesozoic), the flowering plants barely existed and forests were formed by tree ferns and related, now-extinct flowerless plants. Today tree ferns are a treat to the north temperate botanist, because they are confined to wet tropical areas. (And they're so beautiful!)

Yangmingshan Park, Taiwan
tree fern
Taiwan's vegetation is a complex mix. Most species are derived from similar species from the coast of mainland Asia. However, although Taiwan is at 4 degrees north of the Equator, its mountains are high enough to have heavy snow some winters, so the mountain vegetation is often quite different from lowland species. Yangmingshan, in northern Taiwan by Taipei, has some of the most temperate environments.
 Yangmingshan Park, Taiwan

Yangmingshan Park, Taiwan

The uplands of Taiwan, have (of course) been used in various enterprises over the last 300 years,   from logging to military maneuvers, making the vegetation along the hiking trails, in various stages of recovery, more varied and interesting. 

Yangmingshan Park, Taiwan

Yangmingshan Park, Taiwan

Below, violets flowering on the forest floor. 

Yangmingshan Park, Taiwan

I didn't have an opportunity to explore the botanical riches of Taiwan, but they exist. The island is the most diverse region in the newly published Flora of China--including the renowned plant diversity of the mainland's Yunnan Province. (Yes, Taiwanese certainly object to being lumped into the People's Republic of China, but the comparison of plant diversity is useful). Mountains, valleys and coastline, very wet to just moist, temperate to tropical, all have selected for different plants, in many cases unique to Taiwan. Of course you have to have a good eye, or walk in a remote area or look in a botanical garden to see them, because for the most part people surround themselves with common, useful or very showy plants. But they are there. Wild Taiwan is easy to reach, complex and gorgeous.

Comments and corrections welcome.  

Kathy Keeler
More at awanderingbotanist.com



No comments:

Post a Comment