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Coastal Uplands 85,834 0.23% |
Exotic Plants 66,089 0.18% |
Rockland Forests 36,186 0.10% |
FLORIDA LAND USE AND LAND COVER CHANGE IN THE PAST 100 YEARS • 75 |
Table 2.2. Current natural community types based on Florida Cooperative Land Cover data (2015). |
Land Cover Class Acres |
% of |
Statewide Land Cover Class Acres |
% of |
Statewide |
Freshwater Forested |
Wetlands 2,676,694 17.21% Cypress/Tupelo 92,145 0.59% |
Marshes 2,435,732 15.66% |
Isolated Freshwater |
Swamp 74,557 0.48% |
Wet Prairies and |
Bogs 1,736,441 11.16% Floodplain Marsh 49,974 0.32% |
Mixed HardwoodConiferous 1,329,657 8.55% Dome Swamp 48,862 0.31% |
Mesic Flatwoods 1,325,011 8.52% Strand Swamp 44,236 0.28% |
Sandhill 775,755 4.99% Tidal Flat 43,950 0.28% |
Wet Flatwoods 761,947 4.90% Scrub Mangrove 42,388 0.27% |
Cypress 637,310 4.10% Maritime Hammock 29,654 0.19% |
Mangrove Swamp 571,710 3.68% |
Other Coniferous |
Wetlands 26,800 0.17% |
Floodplain Swamp 421,270 2.71% Sand Beach (Dry) 24,386 0.16% |
Salt Marsh 378,678 2.43% Xeric Hammock 24,211 0.16% |
High Pine and Scrub 290,829 1.87% |
Other Hardwood |
Wetlands 23,022 0.15% |
Isolated Freshwater |
Marsh 276,763 1.78% Palmetto Prairie 21,131 0.14% |
Hydric Hammock 240,562 1.55% Coastal Scrub 19,554 0.13% |
Upland Hardwood |
Forest 224,388 1.44% Rockland Hammock 19,320 0.12% |
Sand Pine Scrub 220,967 1.42% Pine Rockland 16,866 0.11% |
Basin Swamp 192,634 1.24% Coastal Uplands 16,570 0.11% |
Upland Pine 164,839 1.06% |
Non-vegetated |
Wetland 13,828 0.09% |
Scrub 159,788 1.03% |
Keys Tidal Rock |
Barren 8,519 0.05% |
Dry Prairie 155,891 1.00% Coastal Strand 6,703 0.04% |
Freshwater NonForested Wetland 138,786 0.89% Slope Forest 5,875 0.04% |
Mesic Hammock 126,285 0.81% Dry Flatwoods 2,459 0.02% |
Baygall 111,861 0.72% |
Outcrop |
Communities 507 0.0033% |
Pine Flatwoods/Dry |
Prairie 105,838 0.68% Upland Glade 34 0.0002% |
Scrubby Flatwoods 93,619 0.60% Total 15,553,254 100.00% |
76 • MICHAEL I. VOLK ET AL. |
Table 2.3. Acres of natural and semi-natural wetlands and uplands in conservation lands. |
Description Acres Percent of Category |
Natural Uplands in Conservation Lands 2,397,767 44.3% |
Natural Uplands not in Conservation Lands 3,010,844 55.7% |
Wetlands in Conservation Lands 6,155,458 56.2% |
Wetlands not in Conservation Lands 4,798,293 43.8% |
Semi-natural Uplands in Conservation Lands 1,167,281 14.9% |
Semi-natural Uplands not in Conservation Lands 6,675,938 85.1% |
Possible Future Changes in Land Use and Land Cover |
Although the focus of this chapter is on historical land use and land cover changes to date, it |
would not be complete without a brief discussion of potential future changes from population |
growth and development. Climate change may also have significant impacts on land cover and |
land use throughout the state, but those topics are discussed in other chapters. |
Though the rate of growth fluctuates, as of 2015 the population of Florida was increasing by |
approximately 1,000 people per day (O’Donnell 2015), requiring additional housing and |
infrastructure be built to accommodate them. A 2016 study of future population allocation and |
development scenarios for 2070 (Carr and Zwick 2016) showed the extensive impacts that |
continued development and land use change will have on existing agricultural and natural |
landscapes if current growth rates and development trends continue. In addition to creating a |
scenario that mapped future development at current trends and densities, Carr and Zwick (2016) |
created an alternative scenario that showed how future population growth in the state might be |
accommodated using higher densities and rates of infill. A baseline scenario that identifies 2010 |
land use patterns within the state was also created for comparison. Table 2.4, adapted from Carr |
and Zwick (2016), provides an acreage comparison of the 2010 baseline, a future “trend” |
scenario, and an alternative scenario for 2070, which shows the significant reduction in acreage |
of agricultural and other undeveloped lands that will occur if current population growth and |
development trends are maintained. |
Coastal development will, at least in some places, be required to relocate inland in response |
to sea level rise, compounding the development pressure and impacts on existing undeveloped |
agricultural and natural landscapes. Where this occurs, the character and ability of inland |
landscapes to provide important agricultural and ecosystem services will be altered. Vargas et al. |
(2014), and Noss et al. (2014) have provided scenarios that show the potential impacts from “inmigration” of human population, combined with additional development to accommodate |
continued population growth. Figure 2.6 shows one such scenario for 2060, where future |
FLORIDA LAND USE AND LAND COVER CHANGE IN THE PAST 100 YEARS • 77 |
population growth was allocated throughout the state based on current trends and densities, and |
coastal populations impacted by a 1 m sea level rise were forced to relocate elsewhere within the |
state. Where coastal development remains in place, coastal protection and hardening structures |
may be used to stabilize the shoreline, which has been shown to cause significant damage to |
coastal ecosystems (Pilkey et al. 2009). Specific studies on the combined impacts of future |
development and sea level rise on biodiversity, natural communities, and landscape-level |
ecological priorities have been conducted by Noss et al. (2014) and the Florida Fish and Wildlife |
Conservation Commission (2008), with results showing that it is more critical than ever to |
carefully conduct future land use planning in a way that protects the resources critical to our state. |
Table 2.4. An acreage comparison of Florida 2070 alternative population allocation scenarios not |
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