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Lab 1: Sand Pine Scrub

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Species in a community compete with each other & replace ... Crescent City Ridge. Deland Ridge. Atlantic Coastal Ridge. Lakeland Ridge. Bombing Range Ridge ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lab 1: Sand Pine Scrub


1
Lab 1 Sand Pine Scrub
  • www.plantatlas.usf.edu
  • www.enature.com/fieldguide

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Introductory definitions
  • Community an assemblage of plants animals
    sharing a common environment operating as a
    highly interrelated unit.
  • Ex the small patches of scrub sandhill on
    campus
  • Succession change in species composition through
    time. Species in a community compete with each
    other replace each other. Succession is
    orderly predictable.
  • A ? B ? C ? D ? E

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Introductory definitions
  • Seral stage temporary, discrete community,
    unable to maintain itself
  • Ex old field
  • Sere the collection of seral stages a series.
    The community type may be fuzzy between the
    arrows.
  • Ex sandhill scrub have fire acting as a
    disturbance to set back succession.
  • Lichens/mosses Grasses/herbs Shrubs
    seedlings Pines Hardwoods
  • A B
    C D
    E
  • Sere Climax

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Introductory definitions
  • Fire climax communities community composition is
    maintained by periodic burning, plant adaptations
    exist to cope with these disturbances. The
    community is set back by the fires.
  • Disturbance ? Recovery ? Growth ? Disturbance.
  • A B C D
    E
  • Fire
  • Climax community species are not replaced they
    replace themselves. After fires, some
    communities require long times to reach the
    climax community.
  • Ex redwoods on the west coast may require 2,000
    years before being replaced by white fir
  • Ex in FL, longleaf pine may live for 400 years
    before being replaced by live oak

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Introductory definitions
  • Endemic limited to one geographic area
    specialized plants animals associated with the
    community, frequently endangered due to loss of
    habitat.
  • Allelopathy the suppression of growth of one
    plant species by another due to the release of
    toxic substances
  • Ex rosemary

7
Scrub
  • Scrub occurs almost exclusively in Florida, with
    some sparse patches on the Alabama coast.
  • The largest example of continuous scrub in
    Florida is located on the Ocala National Forest.
  • Scrub is a xeromorphic community dominated by a
    layer of evergreen, or nearly evergreen oaks or
    Florida rosemary, or both with or without a pine
    overstory, occupying well-drained, infertile,
    sandy soils (Myers 1990).
  • Scrub originates from Pleistocene marine deposits
    of sand from the higher shoreline during
    interglacial periods.

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Location of Florida Ridges (peninsular)
Brooksville Ridge Mount Dora Ridge Lake Wales
Ridge Crescent City Ridge Deland Ridge
Atlantic Coastal Ridge Lakeland Ridge Bombing
Range Ridge
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Soils
  • Sands of marine origin. Archbold Fine (sugar)
    sand is white quartz sand.
  • Soil nutrients are leached from the soil past the
    root zones by the rapid percolation of rainfall
    by the porous sand.
  • The soil is acidic, usually around 4.5, making it
    difficult for the plants to uptake ions
    nutrients. As calcium other cations are
    leached from the soil, hydrogen ions accumulate
    the pH goes down.

10
Internal drainage Recharge
  • The highly pervious sands play an important role
    in recharging the aquifers.
  • The aquifer is a series of caverns in the
    limestone bedrock which Florida sits on that
    collect rainwater. Erosion by rain formed these
    caverns when the water combined with CO2 to form
    carbonic acid.
  • The Floridian aquifer is the largest in the state.

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Floridas aquifers
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Water
  • Water is a major limiting factor to scrub plants,
    therefore most are sclerophyllous.
  • Sclerophyllous (literally means hard leaves)
    adaptation to obtain, store and prevent the loss
    of water
  • Ex Quercus geminata, Sand live oak
  • Leaf adaptations small surface area, a thick
    waxy cuticle the presence of hairs prevent
    water loss. Some plants can turn their leaves
    parallel to the sun to prevent overheating
    water loss.
  • Scrub plants have typically shallow but widely
    spreading root systems to catch water as it
    travels through the soil, as well as a deep tap
    root(s) to reach water at greater depths.

13
Stratification of Plants
  • Canopy is dominated by sand pine, Pinus clausa.
  • The thick shrub layer is composed of oaks
    certain other woody species.
  • Herbaceous ground layer is sparse.
  • The community is called scrub because of its
    density because most of the vegetation is below
    5 ft.

14
Successional Aspects
  • Scrub is a fire climax community. Without
    periodic fires, the scrub advances to xeric
    hardwoods. The fires are usually infrequent
    (15-70 years) high intensity. This maintains
    the community by replacing the stands of sand
    pine keeping the oaks at shrub level.
  • Fire adapted plants will not lose roots to the
    fire can regenerate the above ground biomass.
    Plants such as Sand pine have developed serotiny
    in response to fire, while other species such as
    rosemary have seed banks.
  • Serotinous cones remain closed on the tree with
    no seed development (in this case, until a fire
    occurs)

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Scrub Pre-Burn
Scrub Post-Burn
16
Flora of the scrub
  • Pinus clausa Sand pine serotinous
  • Ceratiola ericoides Florida rosemary soil seed
    bank, allelopathic
  • Lyonia ferruginea rusty lyonia
  • Osmanthus megacarpa scrub olive endemic
  • Asimina reticulata dog banana or pawpaw
    endemic
  • Serenoa repens saw palmetto
  • Quercus chapmanii Chapman oak
  • Q. geminata Sand live oak sclerophyllous
  • Q. inopina Scrub oak
  • Q. myrtifolia Myrtle oak
  • Opunitia humifusa Prickly-pear cactus
  • Galactia elliottii milkpea legume, fixes
    nitrogen
  • Smilax auriculata Greenbriar or Catbriar

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Fauna of the scrub
  • Podomys floridanus Florida mouse endemic to FL,
    commensal w/ gopher tortoise
  • Peromyscus gossypinus cotton mouse
  • Sigmodon hispidus cotton rat
  • Sciurus carolinensis Eastern gray squirrel
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