To some, it may look like an abandoned parking lot with weeds
growing in the pavement cracks, but the life that flourishes in alvar areas is abundant and special. Alvar occurs in areas where all of the
soils have been scraped away by wind, water and ice, leaving the 400
million year old limestone bedrock exposed. These areas are
typically treeless, the vegetation dominated by grasses, sedges and
herbs that grow in cracks within the bedrock, or in a very thin soil
layer over the bedrock.
Alvar species must be able to tolerate extremes: when the sun beats
down on the exposed rock of the alvar, temperatures climb, while in
the winter, there is little to provide shelter or other relief from
the cold. Three unusual early blooming flowers found in Michigan's
alvar are Prairie Smoke (Geum
triflorum), which is a species threatened with extinction in Michigan, the early
buttercup (Ranunculus fasicularis), and also the early saxifrage (Saxafraga
virginiensis). Other alvar species include osprey (state threatened), deer, bear, and a myriad of butterflies and moths, as well as shoreline and grassland bird species.
Areas of alvar are unique in a global
sense, being found only in portions of Canada, the United States and
Sweden. The alvars on Drummond Island, at the extreme east end of
the Upper Peninsula, are the largest remaining high
quality alvars in North America.
Maxton Plains
Proposed Natural Area on Drummond Island provides habitat for
10 Michigan state rare plants, and the unusual mix of arctic with
prairie species is unique in itself.