Black Creek Wilderness

Coordinates: 30°58′47″N 089°01′41″W / 30.97972°N 89.02806°W / 30.97972; -89.02806
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Black Creek Wilderness
Wiggins, Mississippi
Coordinates30°58′47″N 089°01′41″W / 30.97972°N 89.02806°W / 30.97972; -89.02806
Area5,052 acres (20 km2)
Established1984
Governing bodyU.S. Forest Service

Black Creek Wilderness is a 5,052-acre (20 km2)

longleaf pine forest, while the river creates bottomland hardwoods and shorelines with sand bars. It is therefore an important representation of typical coastal plain ecosystems that existed before forests were cleared[2] and the rivers dammed. The Pascagoula River is nationally significant as one of the largest unimpeded rivers remaining in the lower 48 states.[3] Rare species include the Pearl darter and the Yellow-blotched map turtle, both found only in this river and its tributaries. This wilderness area is surrounded by De Soto National Forest, which is also one of the nation's most important areas of coastal plain ecosystems.[4]

Wild and Scenic River

Black Creek, a tributary of the

National Wild and Scenic River. Designated in 1986, 21 miles (34 km) of the creek are classified as "scenic."[5]

Black Creek bisects Black Creek Wilderness, creating a hardwood floodplain of

These represent the sort of forests that form when natural levels of water, including spring flooding and summer drought, control the distribution of species.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Black Creek Wilderness - Wilderness.net
  2. ^ Williams, M. 1989. The lumberman’s assault on the southern forest, 1880–1920. pp. 238–288. In M. Williams. Americans and Their Forests: A Historical Geography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  3. ^ The Nature Conservancy. "Pascagoula River Watershed Conservation Profile". Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  4. ^ Keddy, P.A. 2009. Thinking big: a conservation vision for the southeastern coastal plain of North America. Southeastern Naturalist 8: 213-226.
  5. ^ Black Creek Wild and Scenic River, Mississippi Archived 2010-06-10 at the Wayback Machine - National Wild and Scenic Rivers System

External links