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Great Cypress Swamp

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50 000 atlantic white cedar planted in the great cypress swamp


The Great Cypress Swamp (also known as Great Pocomoke Swamp, Cypress Swamp, or Big Cypress Swamp), is a forested freshwater swamp located on the Delmarva Peninsula in south Delaware and southeastern Maryland. As of 2000, it is the largest contiguous forest on the Delmarva Peninsula.

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Great Cypress Swamp The Great Cypress Swamp Good For Forests

Located at 38°29′N 75°18′W, it is one of the northernmost of the Bald Cypress swamps common in the southeastern United States (Battle Creek Cypress Swamp in Calvert County, Maryland is slightly further north, but much smaller). It covers about 50 square miles (130 km2), mostly in southern Sussex County, Delaware. It is the source of the Pocomoke River, which flows south, and Pepper Creek, which flows northeast.

Great Cypress Swamp 11 Incredible Natural Wonders Found in Delaware

Winter wildlife in the great cypress swamp


HistoryEdit

Great Cypress Swamp Great Cypress Swamp Photograph by Louis Dallara

This swamp once yielded much cypress timber. Due to overharvesting and a disastrous peat fire in 1930 much of its vegetation was destroyed. One of the fires burned for eight months, leading it to be e "Burnt Swamp" by local residents.

Great Cypress Swamp Great Cypress Swamp Delaware Wild Lands

In 1980, Joe Biden, at the request of environmentalists, proposed that the swamp be made into a National Park; this plan was met with resistance from local residents concerned of being overwhelmed with large numbers of visitors. When representative Tom Carper revisited the idea of creating a national park in Delaware in 2004, the Cypress Swamp was not being considered due to these concerns.

Great Cypress Swamp Great Cypress Swamp Delaware Wild Lands

The non-profit organization Delaware Wild Lands manages the swamp and has undertaken efforts to replant bald cypress trees there.

BirdsEdit

Great Cypress Swamp Great Cypress Swamp Delaware Outdoors

The swamp is home to 73 breeding species of birds. The most abundant species in the swamp are the worm-eating warbler and brown-headed cowbird. The swamp also contains two regionally rare species, Swainson's warbler and black-throated green warbler. eBird has records of at least 94 species observed in the swamp, including some found during migration which do not breed there.

References

Great Cypress Swamp Wikipedia