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Camassia Slopes Preserve

Roanoke River Map

LOCATION:
Coastal Plain
Northampton County

SIZE IN ACRES:
176

INVOLVEMENT IN ACRES:
NA


Wild Hyacinth
Wild hyacinth (© Harold Malde)
Bontanizing
Botanizing at Camassia Slopes (© Fred Annand)

TOPOGRAPHICAL MAP:
Boones Crossroads

Topographical maps are available by contacting:
NC Geographical Survey.
1612 Mail Service Center
Raleigh, NC 27699-1612.
(919) 715-9718
www.geology.enr.state.nc.us/

ACTIVITIES & AMENITIES:
Hiking / Birding / Wildflowers

OWNERSHIP & ACCESS:
This Nature Conservancy preserve is only accessible through the North Carolina Chapter field trip program.

SITE INFORMATION:
Wildflower enthusiasts will love taking a field trip to Camassia Slopes Preserve in the lower Roanoke River floodplain. Located on the north bank of the Roanoke River, Camassia Slopes has unusual soil types for the Coastal Plain, with highly basic soils more commonly found on midwestern river banks. The preserve is named for the wild hyacinth (Camassia scilloides) that grows abundantly in the area's hardwood forest and is rare east of the Appalachians. The preserve contains other wildflower species considered rare in North Carolina: sessile trillium, wild blue phlox, purple larkspur, and three birds orchid. In all, more than two dozen species of endangered, uncommon, or rare wildflowers are found at Camassia Slopes.

This unusual assemblage of plant species is thought to be a remnant from the ice age some 220,000 to 400,000 years ago. The preserve's high-base soils and terraced slopes, with angles of 15 to 35 degrees, enable these unique species to thrive here.

Large numbers of breeding neotropical migratory birds can be seen throughout the Roanoke River floodplain in the spring and summer. Prothonotary warbler, Louisiana waterthrush, American redstart, and the rare cerulean warbler are some of the neotropical migratory songbirds that nest at Camassia Slopes. The preserve is also a good spot to see wild turkey.

CONSERVATION HIGHLIGHTS:
In 1981, Union Camp Corporation donated Camassia Slopes to The Nature Conservancy and helped establish the Conservancy's first preserve in the lower Roanoke River floodplain. The Conservancy has now helped protect over 51,000 acres of this relatively pristine ecosystem. Invasive non-native weeds are threatening Camassia Slopes, so Nature Conservancy staff and volunteers are working to combat invasive species such as Chinese privet, Japanese honeysuckle, and Japanese grass.