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periodically (see section 2.2.3). With the lowered water table these sites never flood today and |
many plant species’ roots probably no longer reach ground water. |
3.2.3 Sea Level Rise |
Sea level rise may become a major environmental concern in South Florida if projected trends |
continue. The South Florida Regional Planning Council is anticipating a five (5) foot rise in sea |
level over the next 200 years. Sea level rise has already been implicated in the reduction of pine |
rockland habitat in the lower Florida Keys (Ross et al. 1994), and the complete loss of pine |
rocklands on Key Largo (Alexander 1953). |
Sea level rise in Miami-Dade County will initially impact only the few coastal pine rocklands, |
especially the Deering South Addition, an EEL site on Biscayne Bay. Loss of the pine rockland |
ecosystem will be initiated not by inundation, but by saltwater intrusion to the water table, killing |
pine rockland plant species. A more detailed Geographic Information Systems (GIS) analysis is |
needed, but many pine rocklands may not be impacted directly because of their high elevation |
and inland locations. |
3.3 Climate |
It has been suggested that the climate of Miami-Dade County has changed with the drainage of |
wetlands (Marshall and Pielke 2004). Marshall and Pielke have hypothesized that prior to |
drainage, a persistent moisture flux from heat-retaining wetlands prevented freezing |
temperatures. Post-drainage freezes may have become more common. |
In contrast to the findings of Marshall and Pielke (2004), large cities, such as greater-Miami, are |
known to act as heat islands because of the heat retention by manmade structures. Urban heat |
islands can be as much as two (2) to ten (10) degrees warmer than surrounding areas. Global |
warming is also a factor, which may raise temperatures in Miami-Dade County. |
Changes in climate may have many effects, although they are hard to predict. Possible impacts |
may be changes in flowering and fruiting phenology of plants, fewer (or more) freezes changing |
hardwood subcanopy structure and composition, changes in soil moisture and thereby seed |
germination, changes in plant respiration rates, and susceptibility to biological invasions by |
exotic organisms. |
3.4 Vegetation Structure and Composition |
Although the same three vegetation layers are still conceptually present in existing fragments of |
pine rocklands, in many cases they depart significantly from the original structure and species |
EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ |
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richness. The following paragraphs describe some of the most relevant changes and use the |
description made in the previous section for comparison purposes. |
3.4.1 Canopy |
The historical canopy of pine rocklands, consisting of South Florida slash pine, was significantly |
altered following non-indigenous settlement. The first major impact to the pine canopy was |
logging. Large scale logging took place in Miami-Dade County from the very early 1900s to the |
1950s (Craighead, 1971, Wade et al. 1980, USFWS 2000). Although some small areas of Long |
Pine Key in ENP were never logged, it is likely that all or nearly all areas of pine rockland |
outside of the national park were logged. Craighead (1971) reports a discussion with a mill |
owner in 1952 who stated that during World War II every pine that could be made into a 2x4 was |
cut down. |
Following the end of logging activities, the pine canopy recovered in most pine rockland |
fragments by 1992, resulting in an even-aged stand of mature pines. In August 1992, Hurricane |
Andrew hit South Florida, and in the two years following almost the entire canopy of pine in |
Miami-Dade County outside of ENP was lost. While hurricane winds killed many trees, the main |
source of mortality was a widespread outbreak of a variety of beetles and weevils in the |
weakened trees after the storm, including Ips species (I. |
calligraphis, I. avulsus, and I. grandicollis), Hylobius |
pales, and Pachylobius picivoris (DERM 1995). |
In the mid 1990s, efforts were made to reestablish pine |
trees on sites where they were lost. Pine seedlings were |
planted on 22 preserves, including 12 EEL sites (Table |
1). Many of these trees are now 6 to 15 feet tall. A |
negative result of the reintroduction of pines has been |
the establishment of extreme densities of trees in some |
places due to overplanting. Mortality in many plantings |
was much lower than anticipated. In addition, few sites |
where pines have been planted have burned. Fires |
would have resulted in much natural mortality, limiting |
tree densities. |
Because of fire suppression, some pine rockland |
fragments now have a canopy of hardwoods. The most |
common canopy hardwood is wild-tamarind. Exotic |
hardwoods may also be common canopy trees in firesuppressed sites, including Australian umbrella tree and |
woman’s tongue . |
3.4.2 Subcanopy |
Subcanopy densities are now much denser and taller than they were under historical conditions. |
Conditions are site specific and vary according to geographic location, fire frequency, and |
distance to seed sources (especially rockland hammocks). Sites that have received frequent fires, |
such as Ludlam Pineland, are probably close to historic conditions, with short palm and |
Table 1: Seedling pine plantings |
on Miami-Dade County preserves |
Preserve Owner |
A.D. Barnes Park Parks |
Andrew Dodge Pineland DERM |
Black Creek Forest EEL |
Boystown Pineland EEL |
Deering Estate at Cutler Parks |
Eachus Pineland EEL |
Goulds Pineland EEL |
Larry & Penny Thompson Park Parks |
Ludlum Pineland EEL |
Martinez Pineland Parks |
Miami Metrozoo Parks |
Navy Wells Pineland Parks |
Ned Glenn Nature Preserve EEL |
Nixon Smiley Addition EEL |
Nixon Smiley Pineland Parks |
Palm Drive Pineland EEL |
Rockdale Pineland EEL |
Ron Ehman Park Parks |
Seminole Wayside Park Parks |
Trinity Pineland EEL |
Tropical Park Parks |
West Biscayne Pineland EEL |
EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ |
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Subsets and Splits