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Short Term Dynamics of Vegetation Change Across a Mangrove-Marsh Ecotone in the South-west Coastal Everglades: Storms, Sea-level, Fire and Freeze

Poster presented April 2003, at the Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration Conference

Christa L. Walker1, Thomas J. Smith III2, Kevin Whelan3

1Computer Sciences Corporation, USGS Center for Water and Restoration Studies, Everglades National Park Field Station, 40001 S.R. 9336, Homestead, Fla. 33034, christa_walker@usgs.gov.
2USGS Center for Water and Restoration Studies, 600 Fourth Street South, St. Petersburg, Fla. 33701, tom_j_smith@usgs.gov.
3USGS Center for Water and Restoration Studies, FIU University Park Campus, Miami, Fla. 33199, whelank@fiu.edu.

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Abstract

The position of the mangrove-marsh ecotone (MME) is known to have changed through time at several locations in coastal Everglades and Florida Keys. Based upon aerial photographs of the region, we know that this ecotone has migrated significantly. In 1927 the MME was approximately 100m from the river bank. By 1994, the MME was 350m from the river bank, an inland shift of approximately 250m, a distance readily measurable on the photographs. We established a transect across this MME which spans a distance of >350m, running from a tall mangrove forest at the river's bank (Rhizophora mangle, Laguncularia racemosa, and Avicennia germinans) into a sawgrass (Cladium jamaicense) dominated plain (figure 1). Our physical data indicate that this transect, located on a large coastal island, and is disconnected from upstream hydrologic signals. The transition of an area from mangrove to marsh, or vise versa, will depend on the response of the local hydrological conditions to changes in sea-level and climate at the synoptic scale (Smith 1997). Thus we feel that the movement of this ecotone over the past 70 years is related to a rise in sea-level.

Introduction

Methodology

Results and Discussion

Figures 8a-d. (above) Total # established seedlings.


References

Nelson, G., 1994. Trees of Florida. Pineapple Press, Sarasota, Florida.

Olmstead, I., Dunevitz, H., Platt, W.J., 1993. Effects of freezes on tropical trees in Everglades National Park Florida, U.S.A. Tropical Ecology, 34 (1): 17-34.

Smith, T.J. III, 1997. Hydrologic variation and ecological processes in the mangrove forests of south Florida. Project proposal for C.E.S.I. Everglades National Park.

Acknowledgements

Funding was provided via the Florida Integrated Science Center and from the USGS Biology Discipline Global Climate Change Research Program, the Place-Based Studies Program and from the Critical Ecosystems Studies Initiative administered through Everglades National Park. We wish to thank numerous field assistants who endured heat, mosquitoes, and storms to make data collection possible. For technical support we thank Gordon Anderson, Fara Ilami, and Diane Riggs.


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Related information:

SOFIA Project: Understanding and Predicting Global Climate Change Impacts on the Vegetation and Fauna of Mangrove Forested Wetlands in Florida



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