The Columbia Mountains Natural Region

Mount Revelstoke National Park

Mount Revelstoke and Glacier national parks of Canada together represent the Columbia Mountains Natural Region within Canada's system of national parks. The Columbia Mountain ranges (Purcells, Selkirks, Cariboos, Monashees) form the first tall mountain barrier east of the Coast Mountains. They are geologically and climatically distinct from the Canadian Rockies, found east of Glacier National Park. Mount Revelstoke National Park lies entirely within the Selkirk Range of the Columbia Mountains.

Our weather originates over the Pacific Ocean. Wet, mild westerly air masses are intercepted by the wall of the Columbias, dumping heavy rains in summer, and heavy snowfall in the winter. High annual precipitation, deep snow accumulations and relatively moderate winter temperatures are characteristic of the Columbias and their two national parks. (For more on weather and seasons, visit our Weather page.

Mount Revelstoke from across the Columbia River
Rainforest - Snow Forest - No Forest © Parks Canada / Michael Morris

Mount Revelstoke National Park contains three distinct life zones created by elevation. The higher the elevation, the more often precipitation occurs as snow rather than rain. Deep, lingering snow and colder temperatures at high elevations shorten the growing season, until an elevation is reached beyond which no trees can grow. The three life zones can be thought of as "Rainforest, Snowforest and No Forest."

At the lowest elevations in the park, the region's high annual precipitation falls mostly as rain. This is the interior rainforest: dense vegetation and large trees remind many visitors of the coastal Pacific Northwest. Western red cedar, western hemlock, and western white pine tower over shrubs such as devil's club, Pacific yew, and mountain box. A rich variety of ferns and mosses carpets the forest floor. Foresters call this zone the Interior Cedar-Hemlock forest. The once-vast forests of British Columbia's interior wetbelt constitute the world's only inland temperate rainforest. You can experience this magnificent forest type along the Giant Cedars Nature Trail.

Learn more about our Old Growth Temperate Rainforest.

Golden snow fleas
Mating swarms of golden snow fleas are seen on and around melting snow in June on the summit of Mount Revelstoke.
© Parks Canada

As you leave the Trans Canada Highway and begin to travel up Mount Revelstoke, you will notice that by about the Snowforest viewpoint, the forest begins to change in appearance and composition. You are entering the interior subalpine life zone, known to foresters as the Engelmann Spruce /Subalpine fir zone. The lower subalpine forests are dominated by Englemann spruce, subalpine fir and mountain hemlock. Trees begin to thin in the upper subalpine near treeline, creating park-like, open meadows. The meadows explode into colour in August, with wildflowers including paintbrush, glacier lily, fireweed, lupine and monkeyflower. You can easily visit subalpine meadows in summer by driving up the Meadows in the Sky Parkway to Balsam Lake, near the summit of Mount Revelstoke.

At about 2000m elevation on average, the growing season becomes so short that trees can no longer survive. Fully 50% of the area of Mount Revelstoke National Park is found above treeline. Much of this area is rock. About 12% of the park is permanent ice and snow. Tundra vegetation includes heather and sedge meadows, but in many places only lichen survives, encrusting the rock. Areas above the treeline provide year-round or seasonal habitat for such wildlife as grizzly bear, mountain goat, white-tailed ptarmigan, hoary marmot, golden-mantled ground squirrel, mountain caribou and pika.

Northern alligator lizard Lizards in the wetbelt? Though rarely seen, northern alligator lizards live on the south facing slopes of Mount Revelstoke - the northernmost extension of their range in British Columbia.
© Parks Canada

Specialized habitats found in Mount Revelstoke National Park include avalanche slopes and wetlands. Wetlands are very rare in the steep, narrow valleys of the Selkirk Mountains. You can explore a wetland of of cattail, sedge, water hemlock and skunk cabbage along the Illecillewaet River at the Skunk Cabbage Nature Trail. Avalanche paths sweep from ridgetop to valley bottom. These areas green up early in spring and are important early season feeding areas for grizzly bears.

For more information on aspects of Columbia Mountains ecology and wildlife:

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