text
stringlengths 0
6.44k
|
---|
1 For reference, a table of all species common names and equivalent scientific names discussed throughout the
|
management plan is provided in Appendix A.
|
EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
Page 2
|
and small areas of the Big Cypress National Preserve in Collier and Monroe counties. This
|
chapter will focus on the pine rockland ecosystem in Miami-Dade County, where the ecosystem
|
has been almost entirely destroyed by agricultural, urban, and suburban development. Only
|
scattered, small parcels remain today. The pine rockland fragments that do remain have suffered
|
from impacts of forest fragmentation, fire suppression, exotic pest invasions, and other forms of
|
disturbance. Fragments that have been acquired by the EEL program must be managed to ensure
|
their long term viability.
|
1.2 Purpose
|
The purpose of this plan is to contribute to the preservation of the natural resources in pine
|
rockland sites owned and/or managed by EEL. To achieve this purpose, this management plan
|
provides:
|
• A brief description of the values and justification for conservation of pine rocklands
|
• A historical perspective of pine rockland presence in the landscape of the county
|
• Current conditions of the pine rockland habitat
|
• Main threats to the pine rockland habitat
|
• Perceived trends within the pine rockland habitat
|
• Management issues that are important to conservation of pine rocklands
|
• Guidelines for future public use
|
• Priorities for monitoring and research
|
This plan draws from other resources, including the Restoration Plan for Dade County’s Pine
|
Rockland Forests Following Hurricane Andrew (DERM 1995), the Miami-Dade County Habitat
|
Management Plan (Miami-Dade County Natural Areas Management Working Group 2004), and
|
the pine rockland chapter of the South Florida Multi-Species Recovery Plan (USFWS 2000).
|
Recommendations from these documents, as well as many other resources cited in the references
|
section, have been reviewed, and when relevant and acceptable, used in this management plan.
|
This chapter is intended not only to guide management of pine rocklands on EEL sites, but also
|
other pine rockland fragments in Miami-Dade County.
|
EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
Page 3
|
2.0 Historical Reference Conditions for the Pine Rockland Ecosystem
|
This section describes the historical condition of Miami-Dade County pine rocklands, as they
|
existed prior to major human disturbance. In considering conservation goals and alternatives, the
|
historical condition described is regarded as the baseline for the ecosystem. Utilizing these
|
conditions as a basis for weighing the importance of conservation efforts will aid in the
|
preservation of the valuable resources associated with pine rocklands in Miami-Dade County and
|
South Florida overall.
|
2.1 Original Pine Rockland Distribution in Miami-Dade County
|
Pine rockland in Miami-Dade County historically occurred on the Miami Rock Ridge. The
|
Miami Rock Ridge is an oolitic limestone formation that extends from north of downtown Miami
|
in a southwesterly arc to Mahogany Hammock in ENP, varying in width from four (4) to ten (10)
|
miles. In historic conditions, the ridge was at a higher elevation than the adjacent marshes of the
|
Everglades, with small wetland prairies dissecting the ridge into numerous, distinct islands
|
(Figure 1). This matrix of limestone and prairies allowed the Everglades to drain into Biscayne
|
Bay.
|
On the Miami-Rock Ridge, pine rockland was historically the dominant habitat. Of the 151,000
|
acres that the ridge historically occupied, almost all of the area was pine rockland. Only small
|
areas of the ridge were occupied by rockland hammock or other ecosystems.
|
2.2 Physiography
|
As discussed above, pine rocklands in Miami-Dade County occur on the Miami Rock Ridge.
|
This ridge varies in elevation between two (2) and 20 feet above sea level. Elevations are highest
|
in the Coconut Grove area and generally decline to the south (Craighead 1971). Other relevant
|
aspects of the physiography (geology, soils, and hydrology) of the pine rocklands are discussed
|
in the paragraphs below.
|
2.2.1 Geology
|
The geology and soils of Miami-Dade’s pine rocklands have a relatively simple structure and are
|
derived from recent geologic history. The surface rocks of the county, exposed in many
|
locations, are nearly all Miami Limestone, a formation produced in the most recent interglacial
|
period of the Pleistocene Epoch when sea level was about 25 feet above today’s level. The
|
interglacial period gradually ended about 100,000 years before present. The parent material
|
deposited during the interglacial time was grains of calcium carbonate, formed by two shallowmarine processes. Along the eastern edge of the county’s mainland where accumulations were
|
thicker, the material consisted of small (but visible) egg-shaped grains of calcium carbonate
|
called “ooids.” These oolitic deposits thinned westward, away from the deeper waters of the
|
Atlantic, where they intergraded with fine-grained (microscopic) calcium carbonate particles
|
deposited from marine algae and the shells of tiny animals called bryozoans in a calmer shallow
|
marine interglacial environment away from more turbulent coastal waters. (Lodge 2005)
|
The most recent glacial period (with the glacial maximum occurring approximately 20,000 years
|
ago), caused much lower sea levels that exposed the sediments. The oolites were initially sand-
|
EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
Page 4
|
EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
Page 5
|
like and subject to wind redistribution and dune formation. Percolation of rainwater gradually
|
solidified the grains by recrystallization into the soft rock we now recognize as Miami
|
Limestone. (Lodge 2005)
|
2.2.2 Soils
|
The presence of a limestone substrate is a major defining character of the pine rockland
|
ecosystem which differentiates it from other types of pine-dominated ecosystems in Florida.
|
Soils in pine rocklands, when present, are usually nutrient-poor sand or loam in a matrix of
|
exposed oolitic limestone. Soil type varies with geographic location on the Miami Rock Ridge.
|
There are two main soil types in Miami-Dade’s pine rocklands outside of ENP. The USDA
|
(1996) has mapped these as Cardsound Rock Outcrop Complex and Opalocka Rock Outcrop
|
Complex. Each of these soils, when present, typically occurs as thin layers over the oolitic
|
limestone substrate, with much of the limestone breaking the surface of the soil deposit.
|
Opalocka Rock Outcrop Complex soil occurs north of the Goulds region. Robertson (1955)
|
referred to the region covered by this soil as the northern Biscayne pinelands. This soil is a
|
highly permeable quartz sand, which is usually white to brown in color (USDA 1996) and
|
slightly basic (Craighead 1971, USFWS 2000). The amount and depth of the quartz sands varies
|
with latitude. To the north, where the Miami Rock Ridge formerly merged with the sandy
|
Atlantic Coastal Ridge, sands were probably very extensive and deep (examples are now
|
destroyed). On some more northerly pine rockland fragments that currently exist, such as the
|
Ludlam Pineland and Rockdale Pineland EEL sites, the sands can be several feet thick and have
|
areas with little or no exposed limestone. In contrast, pine rocklands further south, such as those
|
at Larry and Penny Thompson Park, have thinner deposits of sand, which cover less area.
|
Cardsound Rock Outcrop Complex soil occurs south of the Goulds Region. Robertson (1955)
|
referred to the region covered by these soils as the southern Biscayne pinelands. This silty loam
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.