Bass River State Forest is a 23,563-acre (94 km²) state park in Burlington County, New Jersey, United States. The park, named for the Bass River (New Jersey) which crosses through it, shelters a portion of the environmentally sensitive Pine Barrens but also provides a variety of recreational resources to vistiors. The park is operated and maintained by the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry.
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The first of New Jersey's state forests, Bass River State Forest was acquired by the New Jersey Legislature in 1905 for public recreation, water conservation, and wildlife and timber management. The lands were once occupied by the Absegami, a branch of the Lenape tribe of Native Americans in the United States.
Sixty-seven-acre (27 ha) Lake Absegami, created in the 1930s, provides swimming, boating and canoeing.
A trail through the 128-acre (51 ha) Absegami Natural Area provides access to a pine/oak woods and a small Atlantic white cedar bog, also containing red maples and magnolias.
The 3,830-acre (15 km²) West Pine Plains Natural Area preserves a pygmy forest, a globally rare stunted forest ecosystem consisting of pine and oak trees that reach a canopy height of as little as four feet at maturity. The forest supports the endangered broom crowberry and twelve rare species of moth.
The fifty-mile (80 km) Batona Trail passes through the park, as well as nearby Wharton and Brendan T. Byrne State Forests.
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