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David Reed, M.S. - Environmental Studies 2007 |
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Hillary Cooley, M.S. - Environmental Studies 2004 |
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PALM FUEL DYNAMICS IN FIRE-SUSTAINED PINE FORESTS IN THE FLORIDA KEYS Abstract: In this study, the relationships between the time since last fire and the contributions of two palm species (Silverpalm, Coccothrinax argentata and Key Thatch Palm, Thrinax morrisii) to the burnable fuel load in the lower Florida Keys were examined. The population size distributions, effects of fire and plant size on mortality, annual growth rate, minimum reproductive size, and leaf moisture content of the palms were also determined. Regression models were developed to estimate the live and attached dead burnable biomass for both palm species. Equations with crown area and number of leaves as independent variables best predicted the amount of burnable biomass. Fuel accumulation was then modeled to determine the time until different biomass components begin to stabilize after fire. Live palm biomass continued to increase for approximately 2-5 years after fire, while dead attached biomass continued to increase for up to 15-20 years. In the burned sites a greater percent of mortality was observed in the larger palms. |
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EFFECTS OF HYDROLOGY AND LIGHT ON SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT AND GROWTH OF FOUR WETLAND TREE SPECIES IN TREE ISLANDS OF NORTHERN SHARK SLOUGH, EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK Abstract: Vegetative communities within tree islands known as Bayheads are seasonally inundated and are associated with heterogeneous canopies. Establishment of dominant tree species is strongly affected by hydrology and light. The dominant forest species: Annona glabra, Chrysobalanus icaco, Magnolia virginiana, and Morella cerifera, were the focus of periodic field surveys in three Everglades tree islands. Season of seed-fall, germination, survival, and distribution of seedlings along micro-topographic and light gradients were quantified. Species’ life history traits for flood and shade tolerance, including plasticity in growth response and vigor were measured in experimentally controlled light and hydrologic treatments. Recruitment peaked during March-April, although survival was greatest with earlier establishment and with increasing light. Flood avoidance in A. glabra seedlings and flood tolerance of M. cerifera juveniles showed growth stage differences, revealing separate growth stage flood and shade tolerances. These bayhead-scale responses help to understand slough-scale flooding effects on regeneration and species composition. |
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E-mail: erin.hanan@fiu.edu |
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Danielle Ogurcak, M.S. Candidate - Environmental Studies |
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The future of the endemic pine rockland community on the island of Big Pine Key, FL: The use of plant functional traits to predict successional trajectories resulting from the interaction of disturbance events and sea-level rise
Abstract: The endemic pine rockland community on Big Pine Key, FL provides an excellent opportunity to study how a catastrophic disturbance (like hurricane storm surge) affects a mid-successional freshwater upland community, as this community type occupies the highest elevations on the low-lying islands of the Lower Florida Keys and is reliant on disturbance (from fire in particular) to maintain an open canopy and prevent succession to hardwood hammock. Just such an event occurred on October 24, 2005, when storm surge from Hurricane Wilma flooded much of Big Pine Key with saltwater, leading to widespread death of pine trees and herbaceous vegetation. Plant functional traits will be used to study community response to increases in salinity from this event and changes in fire regime, as well as to test hypotheses about the interaction between disturbance regimes and sea-level rise. I propose to sample understory vegetation and to quantify electrical conductivity in an existing network of permanent plots located on Big Pine Key. Trajectory analysis will be used to analyze the temporal change in plot composition and storm-related changes in herbaceous plant abundances and diversity will be related to several variables, including: fire history, modeled storm surge, pine mortality, elevation, canopy cover/shrub encroachment, and soil salinity. An ecological community map of the island will be created using an ecological classification system of the Florida Keys. The map will provide a baseline for modeling possible changes in species assemblages as result of residual storm surge effects, future disturbances, and sea-level rise scenarios. The identification of specific plant functional traits related to species persistence and adaptation will provide a platform from which to make predictions on the likely trajectories of the ecological communities on the island of Big Pine Key as well as other low-lying oceanic islands and coastal systems under projected sea-level and disturbance regimes. |
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Erin Hanan, M.S. - Environmental Studies 2008 |
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Multi-Scaled Patterning of Plant-Soil-Water Interactions across Tree Islands and Marshes within the Prairie and Slough Landscapes of Everglades National Park Abstract: Everglades heterogeneity is primarily shaped by vegetative, edaphic and hydrologic interactions nested within multiple hierarchical scales. Hydrologic compartmentalization compounded over the past century has altered the scale of tree island and marsh patches within the system’s freshwater mosaic. Restoring Everglades communities and landscapes requires a more inclusive understanding of factors that interact with hydrology to shape and maintain system structure. Interactions between several environmental and soil variables were quantified across two important spatial scales (i.e. tree island and marsh communities nested within the marl prairie and slough landscapes). TN and TP patterns were evaluated for flow-related anisotropy, and tree island woody species composition was analyzed alongside important environmental metrics. Results were scale-dependent and complexly interrelated. Total carbon and nitrogen patterning were directly related to organic matter accumulation, driven by vascular plant patterning at the community level and prolonged flooding at the landscape level. Total phosphorus was most strongly correlated with woody plant patterning across both landscapes. Bioavailable nutrient concentrations were extremely low due to several varying immobilization mechanisms. Species assemblages formed tight groups primarily defined by landscape characteristics. Analyses suggest water management changes are compounded within variables and their interactions, and are often magnified through the Everglades nested scales. |
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E-mail: reedd@fiu.edu |
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E-mail: dogurcak@ufl.edu |

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E-mail: Hillary_Cooley@nps.gov |







