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General description
Threats
Access,
hiking maps & info.
Flora
& fauna
Geology
Archaeology
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Flora and Fauna of Vermillion Cliffs National Monument
- The monument contains outstanding biological objects which
have been preserved by remoteness and limited travel corridors.
The monument's vegetation is a unique combination of cold desert
flora and warm desert grassland, and includes one threatened
species, Welsh's milkweed. This unusual plant, known only in
Utah and Arizona, colonizes and stabilizes shifting sand dunes,
but is crowded out once other vegetation encroaches.
Despite sporadic rainfall and
widely scattered ephemeral water sources, the monument supports
a variety of wildlife species. At least twenty species of
raptors have been documented in the monument, as well as a
variety of reptiles and amphibians. California Condors have been
reintroduced into the monument in an effort to establish another
wild population of this highly endangered species. Desert
bighorn sheep, pronghorn antelope, mountain lion, and other
mammals roam the canyons and plateaus. The Paria River supports
sensitive native fish, including the flannelmouth sucker and the
speckled dace.
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