text
stringlengths 0
6.44k
|
---|
endemic species. At present, the most common herbs in Miami-Dade County pine rocklands, in
|
descending order, are pine fern, low rattlebox, Florida five-petalled leafflower, rhizomatous
|
bluestem, coastal bedstraw, three-seeded mercury, crimson bluestem, pitted stripeseed, Florida
|
whitetop, and wire bluestem (Bradley, unpublished data). The composition and relative
|
abundance of herbs in MDC pine rocklands may have differed historically from present
|
populations.
|
Composition of the herb layer varies greatly with geographic location, soils, and hydrology. Like
|
the subcanopy, more temperate species are to the north and tropical species to the south. The
|
herb layer in sandy areas of the northern Biscayne pinelands may resemble central Florida
|
sandhill ecosystems. Low elevation areas that flooded seasonally consist of plant species that are
|
common in marl prairies, such as rhizomatous bluestem, muhlygrass, sawgrass, and starrush
|
whitetop.
|
The diversity and density of the herb layer is reduced in areas of heavy hardwood density, such
|
as near rockland hammocks. Hardwoods limit the herb layer by limiting sunlight penetration to
|
the ground and by producing a layer of leaf litter that can smother small herbs and limit their
|
germination.
|
2.5 Association with Other Habitat Types
|
Prior to non-indigenous settlement of Miami-Dade County, pine rockland habitat was the
|
dominant plant community on the Miami Rock Ridge. Pine rocklands merged into other habitats,
|
and under proper circumstances succeeded to or from these other habitats. Ecotones between
|
pine rockland and other habitats were historically important habitat for many plant and animal
|
species.
|
Rockland hammocks historically occurred across the range of pine rocklands in Miami-Dade
|
County. Rockland hammocks are closed canopy hardwood forests usually dominated by tropical
|
tree species and the temperate live oak. Rockland hammocks covered small areas of a few acres
|
up to several hundred acres. They occurred in areas that were protected from the fires that burned
|
pine rocklands, typically on the edges of wetlands or in association with abundant solution holes
|
in the oolitic limestone. Pine rockland can succeed into rockland hammock in the absence of fire,
|
and rockland hammocks can succeed into pine rockland with frequent fires. Many plant species
|
grow primarily at the ecotone between pine rockland and rockland hammock, including several
|
that are now rare or imperiled. The ecotone was also very important for wildlife, which used both
|
ecosystems. The rockland hammock ecosystem is discussed as an independent chapter in this
|
management plan.
|
Alexander (1967) reported results of a 25-year study on pine rockland to rockland hammock
|
succession. He reports:
|
“…a complete change from pineland fire-climax to a well-established climatic climax of
|
West Indian tropical flora with Lysiloma bahamensis acting as the invader tree can occur
|
in 25 years in southern Florida.”
|
This statement that pine rocklands can succeed to rockland hammocks within two (2) to three (3)
|
decades of fire suppression has been mistakenly inferred by many readers. While pine rocklands
|
EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
Page 9
|
are fire climax communities, that is, pinelands thrive in an ecosystem subjected to a natural
|
frequency of fires, Alexander’s statement may not be applicable to all pine rocklands in MiamiDade County. Alexander’s results, while accurate for his study, cannot be extrapolated to most
|
pine rockland fragments since his study site was right between two hammocks. Most pine
|
rockland sites in the County occur far away from hammocks.
|
Alexander’s study area, established by Phillips (1940) 25 years previously, was situated between
|
Castellow and Ross Hammocks, which were only separated by about 500 feet. This 500 foot gap
|
was filled with a narrow strip of pine rockland. Succession between the Phillips and Alexander
|
studies was undoubtedly rapid due to heavy seed rain from the adjacent hammocks. Hardwood
|
stem densities, (e.g. false tamarind) may have been high at the study site even before fire
|
suppression. Stem densities are typically higher adjacent to rocklands because of heavy seed
|
rain, but frequent fires keep overall biomass low.
|
Long-term fire suppression in other pine rockland sites has resulted in conditions similar to
|
Alexander’s at only a few sites – all adjacent to rockland hammocks. The Camp Owaissa Bauer
|
Addition EEL site serves as an example. Even in this situation, the succeeded flora consists of a
|
low diversity of trees, shrubs, and herbs and does not approach the biological diversity of mature
|
rockland hammocks. This can be observed in the vicinity of Alexander’s study. The area is
|
dominated by wild tamarind and several other hardwoods, but vegetation structure and
|
composition is clearly distinct form the interiors of the adjacent hammocks.
|
More typically, pine rocklands that have been fire suppressed and are not close to rockland
|
hammocks develop into dense shrublands. Height and coverage of understory palms, especially
|
saw palmetto and cabbage palm, increases as do understory hardwoods such as wax myrtle,
|
myrsine, and marlberry. Most fire suppressed sites also have dense coverage of exotic pest
|
plants, especially Brazilian pepper and Burma reed. As a general rule, pine rocklands do not
|
succeed to rockland hammocks without the proper seed sources, and even then the time to reach
|
complete succession to a climax rockland hammock is unknown.
|
Marl prairies dissected the Miami Rock Ridge, dividing the pine rocklands into a series of
|
isolated islands. Marl prairies are short hydroperiod wetlands with a marl soil substrate that is
|
derived from the precipitation of calcium carbonate from periphyton. The marl prairies that were
|
adjacent to pine rocklands were mainly treeless, dominated by forbs, grasses, and sedges. Water
|
stood or flowed through these prairies for up to several months during the summer wet season.
|
Where pine rockland and marl prairie intersected there was a mix of plant species common to
|
both communities. It is likely that wildlife use was heavy, especially for terrestrial animals that
|
visited the edges of the marl prairies for drinking water. The marl prairie ecosystem is discussed
|
as an independent chapter in this management plan.
|
2.6 Historical Successional Processes
|
The pine rockland ecosystem is subject to a number of natural stressors, which influence
|
community structure and composition. In some circumstances the pine rockland community can
|
succeed into other ecosystems. Natural processes that determine the ecological characteristics of
|
pine rocklands include fires, the regular occurrence of tropical cyclones, and the rather sporadic
|
incidence of frosts.
|
EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
Page 10
|
2.6.1 Fire
|
Fire frequency for pine rocklands in
|
Miami-Dade County is generally accepted
|
as about once every three (3) to seven (7)
|
years (Hofstetter 1973, Snyder 1990,
|
USFWS 2000), although Olmsted and
|
Loope (1984) suggest that 3-7 years may
|
be too frequent for young pines to attain a
|
large enough size to survive a fire. It has
|
been suggested that these fires are usually
|
ignited by lightning in the summer rainy
|
season between June and October (Doren
|
et al. 1993), or between April and June
|
(Beckage et al. 2003). Given that lightning
|
strikes occur year-round, and begin to
|
increase in the transition from the dry season to the wet season between March and May
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.