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Home > Ecosystem > Parks & Lands > National Forests > Caribou-Targhee
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The 3 million acre Caribou-Targhee National Forest lies primarily in southeastern Idaho, stretching from the Montana border on the north to the Utah boarder on the south. Topography ranges from low-lying lava flows to lofty mountain peaks. Some of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystems great rivers the Henrys Fork, the Snake, and Bear Rivers flow through the Caribou-Targhee. Snowmelt, springs, and seeps provide the flows for thousands of miles of smaller rivers and creeks across the forest. Vegetation ranges from aspen, maple, Douglas fir, and lodgepole pine forests to vast expanses of sagebrush steppe grasslands and mountain meadows. There are more than 334 vertebrate species that call the forest home from grizzly bears, wolverine, moose, and mountain goats to pikas, spotted frogs, mountain whitefish, and two species of native cutthroat trout. In the past the C-TNF has witnessed the most extensive logging and road building of any forest in the GYE. The clear-cuts are still visible from space and the road network still causes harm to grizzly bears, continues to dump sediment in adjacent streams, and has become the playground of motorized recreationists. Phosphate mining on the Caribou zone of the forest has led to widespread selenium contamination of streams, soils, and plant communities. The consequences of decades of phosphate mining are a scarred landscape, extirpation of native cutthroat trout from some streams, and health warnings that caution parents from letting their children eat fish from other streams.
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