Poster presented April 2003, at the Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration Conference
William F. Loftus1, Robert M. Kobza1,2, Delissa Padilla1, and Joel C. Trexler3
1USGS, FISC-CWRS, Everglades Field Station, Homestead, FL, 2JCWS-USGS, 3Florida International University, Miami, FL
Abstract |
The Rocky Glades is a south Florida landscape degraded by drainage and land conversion. It remains structurally intact only in Everglades National Park. This important short-hydroperiod wetland maintains a persistent fish community because of refuges in the highly eroded karst and connections to permanent water bodies. Fishes can survive beneath the surface for months, but the degree that local refuges (solution holes) versus distant refuges (sloughs and canals) provide recruits for recolonization is unclear.
In 2000, we performed a pilot study to test use drift fence/funnel traps to study fish dispersal, composition, and succession. The study was expanded spatially in 2001, and we also used traps to sample solution holes. Fishes colonized surface habitats almost immediately after flooding, indicating use of local refuges. Most of the 24 fish species collected appeared during the first week of reflooding. Larger-bodied species and non-native fishes appeared to immigrate later. We describe how the data will be used in restoration of this region and the future research questions and requirements to achieve that goal.
Introduction |
Karst wetlands are poorly studied aquatic habitats. Their ecology depends on interactions of geology, hydrology, and biological processes. The Rocky Glades, the drainage divide between Shark and Taylor sloughs, is an example of a karst wetland characterized by:
| Figure 1 - Array Locations |
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| Fig. 2a | Fig. 2b | |
![]() Eastern Edge of the Everglades |
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| Figure 2a. Rocky Glades in January 1897 (Willoughby 1898) [larger image]; 2b. Rocky Glades in November 2001. Hard to float a boat today! [larger image] | ||
| Figure 3 -Solution Hole |
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Objectives |
Methods |
In 2000, 4 drift-fence arrays (#1-4)(Array 2: Figs 4a-c) erected to measure dispersal and relative abundance of fishes with the arrival of the wet season (Fig. 1). The road shoulder is the southern border to each array. Minnow traps at center sampled for 24h. In 2001, additional 9 arrays (#s 5-13) erected away from roads for wider spatial coverage (Fig. 1). Arrays 7-13 sampled less frequently because of logistical constraints.
Dry![]() |
Traps![]() |
Wet![]() |
| Fig. 4a [larger image] | Fig. 4b [larger image] | Fig. 4c [larger image] |
Sampling Design (2000):
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Sampling Design (2001-Present):
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| When wetlands dry, minnow traps sample fishes using holes near arrays for refuge. Holes sampled twice weekly, then weekly. Fishes measured, identified, and returned to holes alive. | ![]() [larger image] |
Data |
| Figure 5a Depth over time (cm) - 2000 |
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| Figure 5b Depth over time (cm) - 2001 |
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| 6a [larger image] |
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| 6b [larger image] |
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| 6c [larger image] |
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| Species | No. of fish | % of fish |
|---|---|---|
| Gambusia holbrooki | 14673 | 60.1% |
| Jordanella floridae | 3377 | 13.8% |
| Lepomis marginatus | 2222 | 9.1% |
| Poecilia latipinna | 1626 | 6.7% |
| Fundulus confluentus | 863 | 3.5% |
| Heterandria formosa | 406 | 1.7% |
| Belonesox belizanus | 233 | 1.0% |
| Cichlasoma urophthalmus | 198 | 0.8% |
| Cichlasoma bimaculatum | 123 | 0.5% |
| Other species* | 272 | 1.1% |
| *E. sucetta, E. evergladei, L. microlophus, L. macrochirus, L. punctatus, T. mariae, N. maculatus, N. gyrinus, C. variegatus, C. managuense, E. gloriosus, C. gulosus, A. natalis, and F. chrysotus | ||
| Array | # Fish caught per trap day |
# of different species caught |
Flood Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 87 | 18 | 109 days |
| 2 | 159 | 20 | 111 days |
| 3 | 142 | 19 | 158 days |
| 4 | 301 | 20 | 214 days |
| Array | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | x | 17 | 15 | 17 |
| 2 | 17 | x | 16 | 19 |
| 3 | 15 | 16 | x | 16 |
| 4 | 17 | 19 | 16 | x |
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Restoration Hypotheses |
Rocky Glades historically had longer flooding periods, deeper water, higher groundwater levels, and dried later in autumn than under today's conditions (Fig. 7).
This promoted freer movements by fishes, longer feeding and reproduction periods, shorter times in confined refuges, and availability to wading birds early in the dry season.
7a![]() |
7b![]() |
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| Figure 7A. Cartoon of wet/dry season hydrology in historical Rocky Glades; B. Present-day conditions. [click on each of the images above to view a larger version] | ||
Present-day conditions result in shorter flooding periods, discontinuous flooding patterns, and fish remain longer in refuges where mortality is high. CERP must try to restore historical conditions.
Questions/Plans |
We will use present-day data on fish/habitat relationships in combination with modeled historical conditions to set targets for restoration. We continue to study the role of the Rocky Glades in south Florida:
| Attempt to use stable isotope and otolith markers to identify sources of Rocky Glades fishes. | ![]() [larger image] |
Special thanks to Victoria Foster, Andrew Martin, Phil George, Diane Riggs, Hardin Waddle, and Angela Griffith for array construction, field, and lab processing. This study is supported by DOI's Critical Ecosystem Studies Initiative (CESI) in cooperation with the US National Park Service, and by the USGS Florida Integrated Science Center.
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Related information:
SOFIA Project: The Role of Aquatic Refuges in the Wetland Complex of Southern Florida in Relation to System Restoration
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey
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Last updated: 03 January, 2005 @ 10:16 AM (KP)