Natural Resource Condition Assessments for Shenandoah National Park

A road lined by trees with fall foliage
Skyline Drive between Big Meadows and Hawksbill.

NPS/Mara Meisel.

Shenandoah National Park is located along the narrow Blue Ridge Mountains in northwestern Virginia and lies closer to more people than any other National Park unit in the country. The park’s biota and natural features include: well-exposed strata of the Appalachians, one of the oldest mountain ranges in the world; diverse animal and plant populations and habitats; migratory bird breeding habitat and stopover points; and forested watersheds that perpetuate numerous streams flowing from uplands to lowlands. Two peaks, Stony Man and Hawksbill, exceed 4,000 feet.

The range of elevation, slopes and aspects, rocks and soils, precipitation, and latitude create a mix of habitats. Tens of thousands of living creatures make their homes in the park, from black bear resting beneath rock overhangs, to tiny aquatic insects darting through cool mountain streams. The park is the only place in the world where Shenandoah salamanders live. Today, many of these park features and resources are threatened by poor air quality, acid precipitation, and invasive plants and pests.

Traditional NRCA Report: 2016

In an effort to better understand the condition of the natural resources and processes within Shenandoah National Park, a Natural Resource Condition Assessment was conducted and published in 2016. This assessment was a collaborative project between NPS staff, the University of Maryland and the University of Richmond. This team examined available data and chose a selection of indicators to evaluate within four resource topics:

- Air resources

- Terrestrial resources

- Aquatic resources

- Landscape dynamics

Shenandoah National Park is unique in that, unlike many other national parks throughout the country, it is a park resulting from managed regeneration. The park was created to enable land that had been heavily used over the centuries for farming, logging and mining to regenerate. Overall, the assessment showed that resources within the Park are of moderate concern. Three resource indicators (birds, viewshed, and landcover) were in good condition; six indicators (ozone, big meadows area, non-native vegetation, water quality, aquatic macroinvertebrates, and roads) were given a condition status of moderate concern; three indicators (wet sulfur and nitrogen deposition, visibility, and fire dependent systems) were given a condition status of significant concern; and one indicator (atmospheric mercury deposition) was not given a condition status.


For other reports and natural resource datasets visit the NPS Data Store.

Source: Data Store Collection 7765 (results presented are a subset). To search for additional information, visit the Data Store.

Last updated: June 30, 2022

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