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<title>FCE LTER Journal Articles</title>
<copyright>Copyright (c) 2013 Florida International University All rights reserved.</copyright>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles</link>
<description>Recent documents in FCE LTER Journal Articles</description>
<language>en-us</language>
<lastBuildDate>Thu, 06 Jun 2013 01:42:54 PDT</lastBuildDate>
<ttl>3600</ttl>


	
		
	

	
		
	







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<title>A preliminary analysis of the correlation of food-web characteristics with hydrology and nutrient gradients in the southern Everglades</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/272</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/272</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 04 Jun 2013 06:13:35 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>We estimated trophic position and carbon source for three consumers (Florida gar, <em>Lepisosteus platyrhincus</em>; eastern mosquitofish, <em>Gambusia holbrooki</em>; and riverine grass shrimp, <em>Palaemonetes paludosus</em>) from 20 sites representing gradients of productivity and hydrological disturbance in the southern Florida Everglades, U.S.A. We characterized gross primary productivity at each site using light/dark bottle incubation and stem density of emergent vascular plants. We also documented nutrient availability as total phosphorus (TP) in floc and periphyton, and the density of small fishes. Hydrological disturbance was characterized as the time since a site was last dried and the average number of days per year the sites were inundated for the previous 10 years. Food-web attributes were estimated in both the wet and dry seasons by analysis of δ15N (trophic position) and δ13C (food-web carbon source) from 702 samples of aquatic consumers. An index of carbon source was derived from a two-member mixing model with Seminole ramshorn snails (<em>Planorbella</em> <em>duryi</em>) as a basal grazing consumer and scuds (amphipods <em>Hyallela azteca</em>) as a basal detritivore. Snails yielded carbon isotopic values similar to green algae and diatoms, while carbon values of scuds were similar to bulk periphyton and floc; carbon isotopic values of cyanobacteria were enriched in C13compared to all consumers examined. A carbon source similar to scuds dominated at all but one study site, and though the relative contribution of scud-like and snail-like carbon sources was variable, there was no evidence that these contributions were a function of abiotic factors or season. Gar consistently displayed the highest estimated trophic position of the consumers studied, with mosquitofish feeding at a slightly lower level, and grass shrimp feeding at the lowest level. Trophic position was not correlated with any nutrient or productivity parameter, but did increase for grass shrimp and mosquitofish as the time following droughts increased. Trophic position of Florida gar was positively correlated with emergent plant stem density.</p>

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<author>Alissa J. WIlliams et al.</author>


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<title>The Engaged University: Providing a Platform for Research That Transforms Society</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/271</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/271</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 04 Jun 2013 06:07:38 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>Despite a growing recognition that the solutions to current environmental problems will be developed through collaborations between scientists and stakeholders, substantial challenges stifle such cooperation and slow the transfer of knowledge. Challenges occur at several levels, including individual, disciplinary, and institutional. All of these have implications for scholars working at academic and research institutions. Fortunately, creative ideas and tested models exist that provide opportunities for conversation and serious consideration about how such institutions can facilitate the dialogue between scientists and society<br /><br /></p>

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<author>Ali Whitmer et al.</author>


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<title>Eastern oysters (Crassostrea virginica) as an indicator for restoration of Everglades Ecosystems</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/270</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/270</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:42:03 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p><p id="x-x-">The Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) attempts to restore hydrology in the Northern and Southern Estuaries of Florida. Reefs of the Eastern oyster <em>Crassostrea virginica</em> are a dominant feature of the estuaries along the Southwest Florida coast. Oysters are benthic, sessile, filter-feeding organisms that provide ecosystem services by filtering the water column and providing food, shelter and habitat for associated organisms. As such, the species is an excellent sentinel organism for examining the impacts of restoration on estuarine ecosystems. The implementation of CERP attempts to improve: the hydrology and spatial and structural characteristics of oyster reefs, the recruitment and survivorship of <em>C. virginica</em>, and the reef-associated communities of organisms.  <p id="x-x-">This project links biological responses and environmental conditions relative to hydrological changes as a means of assessing positive or negative trends in oyster responses and population trends. Using oyster responses, we have developed a communication tool (i.e., Stoplight Report Card) based on CERP performance measures that can distinguish between responses to restoration and natural patterns. The Stoplight Report Card system is a communication tool that uses Monitoring and Assessment Program (MAP) performance measures to grade an estuary's response to changes brought about by anthropogenic input or restoration activities. The Stoplight Report Card consists of both a suitability index score for each organism metric as well as a trend score (− decreasing trend, +/− no change in trend, and + increasing trend). Based on these two measures, a component score (e.g., living density) is calculated by averaging the suitability index score and the trend score. The final index score is obtained by taking the geometric score of each component, which is then translated into a stoplight color for success (green), caution (yellow), or failure (red).  <p id="x-x-">Based on the data available for oyster populations and the responses of oysters in the Caloosahatchee Estuary, the system is currently at stage “caution.” This communication tool instantly conveys the status of the indicator and the suitability, while trend curves provide information on progress towards reaching a target. Furthermore, the tool has the advantage of being able to be applied regionally, by species, and collectively, in concert with other species, system-wide.</p>

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<author>Aswani K. Volety et al.</author>


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<title>Ecology and distribution of diatoms in Biscayne Bay, Florida (USA): Implications for bioassessment and paleoenvironmental studies</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/269</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/269</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:42:01 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>The spatial and temporal distribution of planktonic, sediment-associated and epiphytic diatoms among 58 sites in Biscayne Bay, Florida was examined in order to identify diatom taxa indicative of different salinity and water quality conditions, geographic locations and habitat types. Assessments were made in contrasting wet and dry seasons in order to develop robust assessment models for salinity and water quality for this region. We found that diatom assemblages differed between nearshore and offshore locations, especially during the wet season when salinity and nutrient gradients were steepest. In the dry season, habitat structure was primary determinant of diatom assemblage composition. Among a suite of physicochemical variables, water depth and sediment total phosphorus (STP) were most strongly associated with diatom assemblage composition in the dry season, while salinity and water total phosphorus (TP) were more important in the wet season. We used indicator species analysis (ISA) to identify taxa that were most abundant and frequent at nearshore and offshore locations, in planktonic, epiphytic and benthic habitats and in contrasting salinity and water quality regimes. Because surface water concentrations of salts, total phosphorus, nitrogen (TN) and organic carbon (TOC) are partly controlled by water management in this region, diatom-based models were produced to infer these variables in modern and retrospective assessments of management-driven changes. Weighted averaging (WA) and weighted averaging partial least squares (WA-PLS) regressions produced reliable estimates of salinity, TP, TN and TOC from diatoms (<em>r</em><sup>2</sup> = 0.92, 0.77, 0.77 and 0.71, respectively). Because of their sensitivity to salinity, nutrient and TOC concentrations diatom assemblages should be useful in developing protective nutrient criteria for estuaries and coastal waters of Florida.</p>

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<author>Anna Wachnicka et al.</author>


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<title>Correspondence of historic salinity fluctuations in Florida Bay, USA, to atmospheric variability and anthropogenic changes</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/268</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/268</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:42:00 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>Florida Bay is a highly dynamic estuary that exhibits wide natural fluctuations in salinity due to changes in the balance of precipitation, evaporation and freshwater runoff from the mainland. Rapid and large-scale modification of freshwater flow and construction of transportation conduits throughout the Florida Keys during the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries reshaped water circulation and salinity patterns across the ecosystem. In order to determine long-term patterns in salinity variation across the Florida Bay estuary, we used a diatom-based salinity transfer function to infer salinity within 3.27 ppt root mean square error of prediction from diatom assemblages from four ~130 year old sediment records. Sites were distributed along a gradient of exposure to anthropogenic shifts in the watershed and salinity. Precipitation was found to be the primary driver influencing salinity fluctuations over the entire record, but watershed modifications on the mainland and in the Florida Keys during the late-1800s and 1900s were the most likely cause of significant shifts in baseline salinity. The timing of these shifts in the salinity baseline varies across the Bay: that of the northeastern coring location coincides with the construction of the Florida Overseas Railway (AD 1906–1916), while that of the east-central coring location coincides with the drainage of Lake Okeechobee (AD 1881–1894). Subsequent decreases occurring after the 1960s (east-central region) and early 1980s (southwestern region) correspond to increases in freshwater delivered through water control structures in the 1950s–1970s and again in the 1980s. Concomitant increases in salinity in the northeastern and south-central regions of the Bay in the mid-1960s correspond to an extensive drought period and the occurrence of three major hurricanes, while the drop in the early 1970s could not be related to any natural event. This paper provides information about major factors influencing salinity conditions in Florida Bay in the past and quantitative estimates of the pre- and post-South Florida watershed modification salinity levels in different regions of the Bay. This information should be useful for environmental managers in setting restoration goals for the marine ecosystems in South Florida, especially for Florida Bay.</p>

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<author>Anna Wachnicka et al.</author>


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<title>Distribution of Diatoms and Development of Diatom-Based Models for Inferring Salinity and Nutrient Concentrations in Florida Bay and Adjacent Coastal Wetlands of South Florida (USA)</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/267</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/267</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:41:58 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>The composition and distribution of diatom algae inhabiting estuaries and coasts of the subtropical Americas are poorly documented, especially relative to the central role diatoms play in coastal food webs and to their potential utility as sentinels of environmental change in these threatened ecosystems. Here, we document the distribution of diatoms among the diverse habitat types and long environmental gradients represented by the shallow topographic relief of the South Florida, USA, coastline. A total of 592 species were encountered from 38 freshwater, mangrove, and marine locations in the Everglades wetland and Florida Bay during two seasonal collections, with the highest diversity occurring at sites of high salinity and low water column organic carbon concentration (WTOC). Freshwater, mangrove, and estuarine assemblages were compositionally distinct, but seasonal differences were only detected in mangrove and estuarine sites where solute concentration differed greatly between wet and dry seasons. Epiphytic, planktonic, and sediment assemblages were compositionally similar, implying a high degree of mixing along the shallow, tidal, and storm-prone coast. The relationships between diatom taxa and salinity, water total phosphorus (WTP), water total nitrogen (WTN), and WTOC concentrations were determined and incorporated into weighted averaging partial least squares regression models. Salinity was the most influential variable, resulting in a highly predictive model (<em>r</em> <sub>apparent</sub> <sup>2</sup>  = 0.97, <em>r</em> <sub>jackknife</sub> <sup>2</sup>  = 0.95) that can be used in the future to infer changes in coastal freshwater delivery or sea-level rise in South Florida and compositionally similar environments. Models predicting WTN (<em>r</em> <sub>apparent</sub> <sup>2</sup>  = 0.75, <em>r</em> <sub>jackknife</sub> <sup>2</sup>  = 0.46), WTP (<em>r</em> <sub>apparent</sub> <sup>2</sup>  = 0.75, <em>r</em> <sub>jackknife</sub> <sup>2</sup>  = 0.49), and WTOC (<em>r</em> <sub>apparent</sub> <sup>2</sup>  = 0.79, <em>r</em> <sub>jackknife</sub> <sup>2</sup>  = 0.57) were also strong, suggesting that diatoms can provide reliable inferences of changes in solute delivery to the coastal ecosystem.</p>

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<author>Anna Wachnicka et al.</author>


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<title>Impact of Late Holocene climate variability and anthropogenic activities on Biscayne Bay (Florida, U.S.A.): Evidence from diatoms</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/266</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/266</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:41:56 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>Shallow marine ecosystems are experiencing significant environmental alterations as a result of changing climate and increasing human activities along coasts. Intensive urbanization of the southeast Florida coast and intensification of climate change over the last few centuries changed the character of coastal ecosystems in the semi-enclosed Biscayne Bay, Florida. In order to develop management policies for the Bay, it is vital to obtain reliable scientific evidence of past ecological conditions. The long-term records of subfossil diatoms obtained from No Name Bank and Featherbed Bank in the Central Biscayne Bay, and from the Card Sound Bank in the neighboring Card Sound, were used to study the magnitude of the environmental change caused by climate variability and water management over the last ~ 600 yr. Analyses of these records revealed that the major shifts in the diatom assemblage structures at No Name Bank occurred in 1956, at Featherbed Bank in 1966, and at Card Sound Bank in 1957. Smaller magnitude shifts were also recorded at Featherbed Bank in 1893, 1942, 1974 and 1983. Most of these changes coincided with severe drought periods that developed during the cold phases of El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO), Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) and Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), or when AMO was in warm phase and PDO was in the cold phase. Only the 1983 change coincided with an unusually wet period that developed during the warm phases of ENSO and PDO. Quantitative reconstructions of salinity using the weighted averaging partial least squares (WA-PLS) diatom-based salinity model revealed a gradual increase in salinity at the three coring locations over the last ~ 600 yr, which was primarily caused by continuously rising sea level and in the last several decades also by the reduction of the amount of freshwater inflow from the mainland. Concentration of sediment total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP) and total organic carbon (TOC) increased in the second half of the 20th century, which coincided with the construction of canals, landfills, marinas and water treatment plants along the western margin of Biscayne Bay. Increased magnitude and rate of the diatom assemblage restructuring in the mid- and late-1900s, suggest that large environmental changes are occurring more rapidly now than in the past.</p>

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<author>Anna Wachnicka et al.</author>


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<title>Response of diatom assemblages to 130 years of environmental change in Florida Bay (USA)</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/265</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/265</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:41:54 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>Coastal ecosystems around the world are constantly changing in response to interacting shifts in climate and land and water use by expanding human populations. The development of agricultural and urban areas in South Florida significantly modified its hydrologic regime and influenced rates of environmental change in wetlands and adjacent estuaries. This study describes changes in diatom species composition through time from four sediment cores collected across Florida Bay, for the purposes of detecting periods of major shifts in assemblage structure and identifying major drivers of those changes. We examined the magnitude of diatom assemblage change in consecutive 2-cm samples of the <sup>210</sup>Pb-dated cores, producing a record of the past ~130 years. Average assemblage dissimilarity among successive core samples was ~30%, while larger inter-sample and persistent differences suggest perturbations or directional shifts. The earliest significant compositional changes occurred in the late 1800s at Russell Bank, Bob Allen Bank and Ninemile Bank in the central and southwestern Bay, and in the early 1900s at Trout Cove in the northeast. These changes coincided with the initial westward redirection of water from Lake Okeechobee between 1881 and 1894, construction of several canals between 1910 and 1915, and building the Florida Overseas Railroad between 1906 and 1916. Later significant assemblage restructurings occurred in the northeastern and central Bay in the late 1950s, early 1960s and early 1970s, and in the southwestern Bay in the 1980s. These changes coincide with climate cycles driving increased hurricane frequency in the 1960s, followed by a prolonged dry period in the 1970s to late 1980s that exacerbated the effects of drainage operations in the Everglades interior. Changes in the diatom assemblage structure at Trout Cove and Ninemile Bank in the 1980s correspond to documented eutrophication and a large seagrass die-off. A gradual decrease in the abundance of freshwater to brackish water taxa in the cores over ~130 years implies that freshwater deliveries to Florida Bay were much greater prior to major developments on the mainland. Salinity, which was quantitatively reconstructed at these sites, had the greatest effect on diatom communities in Florida Bay, but other factors—often short-lived, natural and anthropogenic in nature—also played important roles in that process. Studying the changes in subfossil diatom communities over time revealed important environmental information that would have been undetected if reconstructing only one water quality variable.</p>

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<author>Anna Wachnicka et al.</author>


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<title>Determination of vertical and horizontal pathways of injected fresh wastewater into a deep saline aquifer (Florida, USA) using natural chemical tracers</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/264</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/264</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:41:52 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>Two deep-well injection sites in south Florida, USA, inject an average of 430 million liters per day (MLD) of treated domestic fresh wastewater into a deep saline aquifer 900 m below land surface. Elevated levels of NH<sub>3</sub> (highest concentration 939 µmol) in the overlying aquifer above ambient concentrations (concentration less than 30 µmol) were evidence of the upward migration of injected fluids. Three pathways were distinguished based on ammonium, chloride and bromide ratios, and temperature. At the South District Wastewater Treatment Plant, the tracer ratios showed that the injectate remained chemically distinct as it migrated upwards through rapid vertical pathways via density-driven buoyancy. The warmer injectate (mean 28°C) retained the temperature signal as it vertically migrated upwards; however, the temperature signal did not persist as the injectate moved horizontally into the overlying aquifers. Once introduced, the injectate moved slowly horizontally through the aquifer and mixed with ambient water. At the North District Wastewater Treatment Plant, data provide strong evidence of a one-time pulse of injectate into the overlying aquifers due to improper well construction. No evidence of rapid vertical pathways was observed at the North District Wastewater Treatment Plant.</p>

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<author>Virginia Walsh et al.</author>


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<title>Regional processes in mangrove ecosystems: spatial scaling relationships, biomass, and turnover rates following catastrophic disturbance</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/263</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/263</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:41:50 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>Physiological processes and local-scale structural dynamics of mangroves are relatively well studied. Regional-scale processes, however, are not as well understood. Here we provide long-term data on trends in structure and forest turnover at a large scale, following hurricane damage in mangrove ecosystems of South Florida, U.S.A. Twelve mangrove vegetation plots were monitored at periodic intervals, between October 1992 and March 2005. Mangrove forests of this region are defined by a −1.5 scaling relationship between mean stem diameter and stem density, mirroring self-thinning theory for mono-specific stands. This relationship is reflected in tree size frequency scaling exponents which, through time, have exhibited trends toward a community average that is indicative of full spatial resource utilization. These trends, together with an asymptotic standing biomass accumulation, indicate that coastal mangrove ecosystems do adhere to size-structured organizing principles as described for upland tree communities. Regenerative dynamics are different between areas inside and outside of the primary wind-path of Hurricane Andrew which occurred in 1992. Forest dynamic turnover rates, however, are steady through time. This suggests that ecological, more-so than structural factors, control forest productivity. In agreement, the relative mean rate of biomass growth exhibits an inverse relationship with the seasonal range of porewater salinities. The ecosystem average in forest scaling relationships may provide a useful investigative tool of mangrove community biomass relationships, as well as offer a robust indicator of general ecosystem health for use in mangrove forest ecosystem management and restoration.</p>

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<author>Greg A. Ward et al.</author>


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<title>Contributions of humic substances to the dissolved organic carbon pool in wetlands from different climates</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/262</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/262</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:41:49 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>Wetlands are an important source of DOM. However, the quantity and quality of wetlands’ DOM from various climatic regions have not been studied comprehensively. The relationship between the concentrations of DOM (DOC), humic substances (HS) and non-humic substances (NHS) in wetland associated sloughs, streams and rivers, in cool temperate (Hokkaido, Japan), sub-tropical (Florida, USA), and tropical (Sarawak, Malaysia) regions was investigated. The DOC ranged from 1.0 to 15.6 mg C L<sup>−1</sup> in Hokkaido, 6.0–24.4 mg C L<sup>−1</sup> in Florida, and 18.9–75.3 mg C L<sup>−1</sup> in Sarawak, respectively. The relationship between DOC and HS concentrations for the whole sample set was regressed to a primary function with y-intercept of zero (<em>P</em> < 0.005) and a slope value of 0.841. A similar correlation was observed between DOC and NHS concentrations, with a smaller slope value of 0.159. However, the correlation coefficient of the latter was much larger when the data was regressed to a logarithmic curve. These observations suggest the presence of a general tendency that the increased DOC in the river waters was mainly due to the increased supply of HS from wetland soils, whereas the rate of the increase in the NHS supply has an upper limit which may be controlled by primary productivity.</p>

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<author>Akira Watanabe et al.</author>


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<title>Historic primary producer communities linked to water quality and hydrologic changes in the northern Everglades</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/261</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/261</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:41:47 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>The northern Everglades Water Conservation Areas have experienced recent ecological shifts in primary producer community structure involving marl periphyton mats and dense <em>Typha</em>-dominated macrophyte stands. Multiple investigations have identified phosphorus (P) as a driver of primary producer community structure, but effects of water impoundment beginning in the 1950s and changes in water hardness [e.g., (CaCO<sub>3</sub>)] have also been identified as a concern. In an effort to understand pre-1950, primary producer community structure and identify community shifts since 1950, we measured pigment proxies on three sediment cores collected in Water Conservation Area-2A (WCA-2A) along a phosphorus enrichment gradient. Photosynthetic pigments, sediment total phosphorus content (TP), organic matter, total organic carbon and nitrogen were used to infer historic primary producer communities and changes in water quality and hydrology regulating those communities. Excess <sup>210</sup>Pb was used to establish historic dates for the sediment cores. Results indicate the northern area of WCA-2A increased marl deposition and increased algal abundance ca. 1920. This increase in (presumably) calcareous periphyton before intensive agriculture and impoundment suggest canal-derived calcium inputs and to some extent early drainage effects played a role in initiating this community shift. The northern area community then shifted to <em>Typha</em> dominance around 1965. The areas to the south in WCA-2A experienced increased marl deposition and algal abundance around or just prior to 1950s impoundment, the precise timing limited by core age resolution. Continued increases in algal abundance were evident after 1950, coinciding with impoundment and deepening of canals draining into WCA-2A, both likely increasing water mineral and nutrient concentrations. The intermediate site developed a <em>Typha</em>-dominated community ca. 1995 while the southern-most core site WCA-2A has yet to develop <em>Typha</em> dominance. Numerous studies link sediment TP >650 mg P/kg to marsh habitat degradation into <em>Typha</em>-dominance. The northern and intermediate cores where <em>Typha</em> is currently support this previous research by showing a distinct shift in the sediment record to <em>Typha</em> dominance corresponding to sediment TP between 600 and 700 mg P/kg. These temporal and spatial differences are consistent with modern evidence showing water-column gradients in mineral inputs (including Ca, carbonates, and phosphorus) altering primary producer community structure in WCA-2A, but also suggest hydroperiod has an effect on the mechanisms regulating periphyton development and <em>Typha</em> dominance.</p>

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<author>Matthew N. Waters et al.</author>


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<title>Maintaining tree islands in the Florida Everglades: nutrient redistribution is the key</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/260</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/260</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:41:45 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>The Florida Everglades is an oligotrophic wetland system with tree islands as one of its most prominent landscape features. Total soil phosphorus concentrations on tree islands can be 6 to 100 times greater than phosphorus levels in the surrounding marshes and sloughs, making tree islands nutrient hotspots. Several mechanisms are believed to redistribute phosphorus to tree islands: subsurface water flows generated by evapotranspiration of trees, higher deposition rates of dry fallout, deposition of guano by birds and other animals, groundwater upwelling, and bedrock mineralization by tree exudates. A conceptual model is proposed, in which the focused redistribution of limiting nutrients, especially phosphorus, onto tree islands controls their maintenance and expansion. Because of increased primary production and peat accretion rates, the redistribution of phosphorus can result in an increase in both tree island elevation and size. Human changes to hydrology have greatly decreased the number and size of tree islands in parts of the Everglades. The proposed model suggests that the preservation of existing tree islands, and ultimately of the Everglades landscape, requires the maintenance of these phosphorus redistribution mechanisms.</p>

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<author>Paul R. Wetzel et al.</author>


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<title>Biogeochemical Processes on Tree Islands in the Greater Everglades: Initiating a New Paradigm</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/259</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/259</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 08:41:43 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
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	<p>Scientists’ understanding of the role of tree islands in the Everglades has evolved from a plant community of minor biogeochemical importance to a plant community recognized as the driving force for localized phosphorus accumulation within the landscape. Results from this review suggest that tree transpiration, nutrient infiltration from the soil surface, and groundwater flow create a soil zone of confluence where nutrients and salts accumulate under the head of a tree island during dry periods. Results also suggest accumulated salts and nutrients are flushed downstream by regional water flows during wet periods. That trees modulate their environment to create biogeochemical hot spots and strong nutrient gradients is a significant ecological paradigm shift in the understanding of the biogeochemical processes in the Everglades. In terms of island sustainability, this new paradigm suggests the need for distinct dry-wet cycles as well as a hydrologic regime that supports tree survival. Restoration of historic tree islands needs further investigation but the creation of functional tree islands is promising.</p>

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<author>Paul R. Wetzel et al.</author>


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<title>Patterns of phosphorus, nitrogen and δ15N along a peat development gradient in a coastal mire, Panama</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/258</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/258</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 07:00:33 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Differentiation of limiting nutrients within small spatial scales has been observed in coastal mangrove forests, but research on other tropical peatlands suggests it is a more widespread phenomenon. In the Changuinola mire of coastal Panama, oligotrophy was hypothesized to increase along a gradient of peat development (peat doming). Nutrient and carbon concentration of leaf tissue, soil, and soil porewater were characterised over a successive sequence of plant communities along the gradient. Soil phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) concentrations decreased from 1200 μg P g<sup>−1</sup> and 27 mg N g<sup>−1</sup> to 377 μg P g<sup>−1</sup> and 22 mg N g<sup>−1</sup> within 2.7 km into the mire interior. These changes coincided with an increase in soil and average leaf N:P molar ratios from 52–128 and 24–41, respectively. Soil P was strongly related to leaf P and soil N:P to foliar N:P. There was a wide range in δ<sup>15</sup>N values for canopy (4.0 to −9.4‰), <em>Campnosperma panamense</em> (4.0 to −7.8‰) and understorey (4.8 to −3.1‰) species. Foliar δ<sup>15</sup>N values of canopy species were strongly related to soil N:P, soil P and leaf P. The depleted foliar δ<sup>15</sup>N values appeared to be an effect of both the N atmospheric source and P limitation. Here, P limitation is likely associated with ombrotrophic conditions that developed as hydrologic inputs became dominated by precipitation.</p>

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<author>Tiffany Troxler-Gann</author>


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<title>Biogeochemical Contributions of Tree Islands to Everglades Wetland Landscape Nitrogen Cycling During Seasonal Inundation</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/257</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/257</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 07:00:32 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>In the Florida Everglades, tree islands are conspicuous heterogeneous elements in the herbaceous wetland landscape. We characterized the biogeochemical role of a seasonally flooded tree island during wet season inundation, specifically examining hydrologically mediated flows of nitrogen (N) and N retention by the tree island. We estimated ecosystem N standing stocks and fluxes, soil and litter N transformation rates, and hydrologic fluxes of N to quantify the net ecosystem N mass flux. Results showed that hydrologic sources of N were dominated by surface water loads of nitrate (NO<sub>3</sub>) and ammonium (NH<sub>4</sub>). Nitrate immobilization by soils and surficial leaf litter was an important sink for surface water dissolved inorganic N (DIN). We estimated that the net annual DIN retention by a seasonally flooded tree island was 20.5 ± 5.0 g m<sup>−2</sup> during wet season inundation. Based on the estimated tree island surface water DIN loading rate, a seasonally flooded tree island retained 76% of imported DIN. As such, seasonally flooded tree islands have the potential to retain 55% of DIN entering the marsh landscape via upstream canal overland flow in the wet season. By increasing reactive surface area and DOC availability, we suggest that tree islands promote convergence of elements that enhance DIN retention. Tree islands of this region are thus important components of landscape-scale restoration efforts that seek to reduce sources of anthropogenic DIN to downstream estuaries.</p>

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</description>

<author>Tiffany Troxler-Gann et al.</author>


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<item>
<title>Patterns of Soil Bacteria and Canopy Community Structure Related to Tropical Peatland Development</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/256</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/256</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 07:00:30 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Natural environmental gradients provide important information about the ecological constraints on plant and microbial community structure. In a tropical peatland of Panama, we investigated community structure (forest canopy and soil bacteria) and microbial community function (soil enzyme activities and respiration) along an ecosystem development gradient that coincided with a natural P gradient. Highly structured plant and bacterial communities that correlated with gradients in phosphorus status and soil organic matter content characterized the peatland. A secondary gradient in soil porewater NH<sub>4</sub> described significant variance in soil microbial respiration and β-1-4-glucosidase activity. Covariation of canopy and soil bacteria taxa contributed to a better understanding of ecological classifications for biotic communities with applicability for tropical peatland ecosystems of Central America. Moreover, plants and soils, linked primarily through increasing P deficiency, influenced strong patterning of plant and bacterial community structure related to the development of this tropical peatland ecosystem.</p>

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</description>

<author>Tiffany Troxler-Gann et al.</author>


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<item>
<title>Relationships Between Hydrology and Soils Describe Vegetation Patterns in Seasonally Flooded Tree Islands of the Southern Everglades, Florida</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/255</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/255</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 07:00:28 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Tree island ecosystems are important and distinct features of Florida Everglades wetlands. We described the inter-relationships among abiotic factors describing seasonally flooded tree islands and characterized plant–soil relationships in tree islands occurring in a relatively unimpacted area of the Everglades. We used Principal Components Analysis (PCA) to reduce our multi-factor dataset, quantified forest structure and vegetation nutrient dynamics, and related these vegetation parameters to PCA summary variables using linear regression analyses. We found that, of the 21 abiotic parameters used to characterize the ecosystem structure of seasonally flooded tree islands, 13 parameters were significantly correlated with four principal components, and they described 78% of the variance among the study islands. Most variation was described by factors related to soil oxidation and hydrology, exemplifying the sensitivity of tree island structure to hydrologic conditions. PCA summary variables describing tree island structure were related to variability in <em>Chrysobalanus icaco</em> (L.) canopy cover, <em>Ilex cassine</em> (L.) and <em>Salix caroliniana</em> (Michx.) canopy cover, <em>Myrica cerifera</em> (L.) plot frequency, litter turnover, % phosphorus resorption of co-dominant species, and nitrogen nutrient-use efficiency. This study supported findings that vegetation characteristics can be sensitive indicators of variability in tree island ecosystem structure. This study produced valuable, information which was used to recommend ecological targets (i.e. restoration performance measures) for seasonally flooded tree islands in more impacted regions of the Everglades landscape.</p>

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<author>Tiffany Troxler-Gann et al.</author>


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<item>
<title>Ecosystem structure, nutrient dynamics, and hydrologic relationships in tree islands of the southern Everglades, Florida, USA</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/254</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/254</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 07:00:26 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Tree islands are an important structural component of many graminoid-dominated wetlands because they increase ecological complexity in the landscape. Tree island area has been drastically reduced with hydrologic modifications within the Everglades ecosystem, yet still little is known about the ecosystem ecology of Everglades tree islands. As part of an ongoing study to investigate the effects of hydrologic restoration on short hydroperiod marshes of the southern Everglades, we report an ecosystem characterization of seasonally flooded tree islands relative to locations described by variation in freshwater flow (i.e. locally enhanced freshwater flow by levee removal). We quantified: (1) forest structure, litterfall production, nutrient utilization, soil dynamics, and hydrologic properties of six tree islands and (2) soil and surface water physico-chemical properties of adjacent marshes. Tree islands efficiently utilized both phosphorus and nitrogen, but indices of nutrient-use efficiency indicated stronger P than N limitation. Tree islands were distinct in structure and biogeochemical properties from the surrounding marsh, maintaining higher organically bound P and N, but lower inorganic N. Annual variation resulting in increased hydroperiod and lower wet season water levels not only increased nitrogen use by tree species and decreased N:P values of the dominant plant species (<em>Chrysobalanus icaco</em>), but also increased soil pH and decreased soil temperature. When compared with other forested wetlands, these Everglades tree islands were among the most nutrient efficient, likely a function of nutrient immobilization in soils and the calcium carbonate bedrock. Tree islands of our study area are defined by: (1) unique biogeochemical properties when compared with adjacent short hydroperiod marshes and other forested wetlands and (2) an intricate relationship with marsh hydrology. As such, they may play an important and disproportionate role in nutrient and carbon cycling in Everglades wetlands. With the loss of tree islands that has occurred with the degradation of the Everglades system, these landscape processes may have been altered. With this baseline dataset, we have established a long-term ecosystem-scale experiment to follow the ecosystem trajectory of seasonally flooded tree islands in response to hydrologic restoration of the southern Everglades.</p>

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</description>

<author>Tiffany Troxler-Gann et al.</author>


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<item>
<title>Diel and seasonal variation in the use of a nearshore sandflat by a ray community in a near pristine system</title>
<link>http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/253</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/fce_lter_journal_articles/253</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 2013 07:00:24 PDT</pubDate>
<description>
	<![CDATA[
	<p>Knowledge of movements and habitat use is necessary to assess a species’ ecological role and is especially important for mesopredators because they provide the link between upper and lower trophic levels. Using acoustic telemetry, we examined coarse-scale diel and seasonal movements of elasmobranch mesopredators on a shallow sandflat in Shark Bay, Western Australia. Giant shovelnose rays (<em>Glaucostegus typus</em>) and reticulate whiprays (<em>Himantura uarnak</em>) were most often detected in nearshore microhabitats and were regularly detected throughout the day and year, although reticulate whiprays tended to frequent the monitored array over longer periods. Pink whiprays (<em>H. fai</em>) and cowtail stingrays (<em>Pastinachus atrus</em>) were also detected throughout the day, but were far less frequently detected. Overall, there was no apparent spatial or temporal partitioning of the sandflats, but residency to the area varied between species. In addition, ray presence throughout the year suggests that previously observed differences in seasonal abundance are likely because of seasonal changes in habitat use rather than large-scale migrations. Continuous use of the sandflats and limited movements within this ray community suggests that rays have the potential to be a structuring force on this system and that focusing on nearshore habitats is important for managing subtropical ray populations.</p>

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</description>

<author>Jeremy J. Vaudo et al.</author>


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