Florida mangroves
The Florida mangroves ecoregion, of the mangrove forest biome, comprise an ecosystem along the coasts of the Florida peninsula, and the Florida Keys. Florida is the state that is home to the most mangroves in the United States. Mangroves are extremely important to the states economy, contributing in more ways than one.
Florida's mangrove species
The Florida mangroves ecoregion includes three mangrove species:- Rhizophora mangle — red mangrove
- Avicennia germinans — black mangrove
- Laguncularia racemosa — white mangrove
- Conocarpus erectus — buttonwood
Zonation
All three mangrove species flower in the spring and early summer. Propagules fall from late summer through early autumn. These plants have differing adaptions to conditions along coasts, and are generally found in partially overlapping bands or zones, roughly parallel to the shoreline. The red mangrove grows closest to open water. It has multiple prop roots, which may help to stabilize the soil around its roots. Further inland is the black mangrove lacking prop roots, but does havepneumatophores, which grow up from the roots to above the water level. The white mangrove grows further inland. It may have prop roots and/or pneumatophores, depending on conditions where it is growing. The buttonwood grows in shallow, brackish water, Florida swamps, or on dry land.
Reproductive strategy
Mangroves have a unique reproductive strategy for a plant. Like mammals they are viviparious, bringing forth live young.Instead of dormant seeds, they produce propagules that have embryonic development while still attached to the tree and only release at the appropriate time into water. Once released from tree they require various dispersal times or an "obligate dispersal periods" where the embryonic development continues. Once a favorable site is found there is a "obligate stranding period" before a tree emerges and begins to grow.
Distribution
Florida mangrove plant communities covered an estimated 430,000 to 540,000 acres in Florida in 1981. Ninety percent of the Florida mangroves are in southern Florida, in Collier, Lee, Miami-Dade and Monroe Counties.Approximately 280,000 acres of mangrove forests are in the hands of the Federal, State and local governments, and of private, non-profit organizations. Most of those acres are in Everglades National Park. Mangroves cover a wide band all along the southern end of the Florida peninsula facing on Florida Bay, from Key Largo across to close to Flamingo, then inland behind the beaches and marl prairies of Cape Sable and all around Whitewater Bay. From Whitewater Bay, a broad band of mangroves extends up the Gulf coast to Marco Island, including the Ten Thousand Islands.
Mangroves also extend throughout the Florida Keys, although coverage has been reduced due to development. Florida Bay is dotted with small islands, which are often no more than mud flats or shoals more or less covered by mangroves. Biscayne Bay also has extensive mangroves, but the northern part of the Bay has been largely cleared of mangroves to make way for urban development. Mangrove coverage is limited elsewhere, with the largest areas in the Indian River Lagoon on the east coast, and the Caloosahatchee River, Pine Island Sound and Charlotte Harbor estuaries and Tampa Bay on the west coast.
Preferred climate
Mangroves are tropical plants, killed by freezing temperatures. These trees can range about halfway up the coast of the Florida peninsula due to mild winter climate and the moderating effect of the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico on the west coast and the Gulf Stream and Atlantic Ocean on the east coast. The Florida mangrove community is found as far north as Cedar Key on the Gulf coast of Florida, and as far north as the Ponce de Leon Inlet on the Atlantic coast of Florida. Black mangroves can regrow from roots after being killed back by a freeze, and are found by themselves a little further north, to Jacksonville on the east coast and along the Florida Panhandle on the Gulf coast. Most of Florida is sub-tropical, making it not ideal for mangroves, so the trees tend to be shorter and the leaves smaller in northern and central Florida than in tropical regions. In deep south Florida and the Florida Keys, the tropical climates allows mangroves to grow larger due to being frost free..
Habitat destruction
Human activity has impacted the mangrove ecoregion in Florida. While the coverage of mangroves at the end of the 20th century is estimated to have decreased only 5% from a century earlier, some localities have seen severe reductions. The Lake Worth Lagoon lost 87% of its mangroves in the second half of the 20th century, leaving a remnant of just 276 acres. Tampa Bay, home to the busy Port of Tampa, lost over 44% of its wetlands, including mangroves and salt marshes, during the 20th century. Three-quarters of the wetlands along the Indian River Lagoon, including mangroves, were impounded for mosquito control during the 20th century. As of 2001, natural water flow was being restored to some of the wetlands.Associated fauna and flora
Fish
The Florida mangrove system is an important habitat for many species. It provides nursery grounds for young fish, crustaceans and mollusks, and for sport and commercial purposes. Many fish feed in the mangrove forests, including snook, gray or mangrove snapper, schoolmaster snapper, tarpon, jack, sheepshead, red drum, hardhead silverside, juvenile blue angelfish, juvenile porkfish, lined seahorse, great barracuda, scrawled cowfish and permit, as well as shrimp and clams. An estimated 75% of the game fish and 90% of the commercial fish species in south Florida depend on the mangrove system.Birds
The branches of mangroves serve as roosts and rookeries for coastal and wading birds, such as the brown pelican, roseate spoonbill, frigatebird, double-crested cormorant, belted kingfisher, brown noddy, great white heron and Wurdemann's heron, color phases of the great blue heron, osprey, snowy egret, green heron, reddish egret and greater yellowlegs.Endangered species
Florida mangroves are also home to the following endangered species:- Smalltooth sawfish
- American crocodile
- Hawksbill sea turtle
- Atlantic ridley sea turtle
- Eastern indigo snake
- Atlantic saltmarsh snake
- Southern bald eagle
- Peregrine falcon
- Barbados yellow warbler
- Key deer
- West Indian manatee
Other fauna
Above the water mangroves also shelter and support snails, crabs, and spiders. Below the water's surface, often encrusted on the mangrove roots, are sponges, anemones, corals, oysters, tunicates, mussels, starfish, crabs, and Florida spiny lobster.Flora
The mangrove branches and trunks support various epiphytes, such as bromeliads. Those of the genus Tillandsia found in them include Spanish moss, and reindeer lichen. Below the water, spaces protected by splayed mangrove roots can shelter seagrasses.Effects of climate change
is a complex issue with numerous variables. The exact severity is impossible to predict. The effects of climate change on a species are even more difficult to discern. Despite the intricacy, scientists have formulated several hypotheses of the effects of climate change on the mangroves of southern Florida. The overall hypothesis is that mangroves are vulnerable to climate change, which will affect this ecosystem via three main mechanisms: sea level rise, decreased cold weather events, and increased storm severity. A rise in sea level is expected to affect the range of mangroves, the decrease in cold weather events will allow the range of mangroves to shift further north, and the increase in the severity of storms is anticipated to change the species composition and morphology of the mangroves.Sea level rise
Between 1870 and 2004, the current sea level rise has been approximately 8 inches total, or 1.46 mm/yr. and studies show that mangroves in southern Florida expanded their territories 3.3 km inland since the 1940s. However, this expansion inland is often at the expense of freshwater marsh/swamp habitats. As climate change continues, this could potentially negatively affect wildlife resources that depend upon freshwater habitats over mangrove habitats, such as the Everglades. The figure at the right shows projections of mangrove distributions under low, moderate, and severe sea rise scenarios by the year 2100. The IPCC Fifth Assessment Report which was finalized in 2014 is now predicting 52–98 cm sea level rise by 2100. In addition, this report has often been criticized as underestimating the severity of climate change making it even more likely for the moderate or severe sea rise scenarios to occur. Despite the fact mangroves are currently keeping pace with sea level rise, at rates greater than 2.3mm/yr there is potential for mangrove ecosystem failure. A failure that is perhaps inevitable for mangroves inhabiting low-lying islands that will be inundated. Sea level rise is expected to accelerate in the future and there is some indication already of this beginning to occur. However, there are examples from the past in which mangroves have both collapsed and survived at rates greater than 2.3mm/yr. Mangroves that are on continental coasts instead of low-lying islands experience reduced vulnerability and have greater opportunities to occupy new habitat.Temperature shifts
Southern Florida's mangroves are a tropical species that are limited to the tip of the Florida peninsula and the Florida Keys due to a climate preference. The upper portion of Florida falls into a sub-tropical climate hindering mangrove growth there due to cold weather events such as freezing. Twenty-eight years of satellite imagery has shown that mangroves have shifted their range northward in Florida in response to less harsh winters and less frequent cold events. This is an issue apart from sea level rise which will cause mangroves to move inland even though both are caused by climate change.Increased storm severity
With climate change hurricanes in southern Florida are projected to become more severe causing mangrove populations to be shorter, of smaller diameter, and contain a higher proportion of red mangrove species. Mangroves could be further threatened by storms if the return time of major storms exceeds reestablishment. In addition, mangroves have been shown to reduce the flow pressure of water surges associated with tsunamis, hurricanes, etc. and by doing so protect coastlines. The loss of mangroves could therefore be detrimental to coastal communities exposed to increased storm surges.Ways to promote resilience
Due to the potential for the acceleration of sea level rise and increased storm severity in the future due to climate change, mangroves of southern Florida may be in jeopardy. This has implications not only for mangroves forests but also the freshwater habitats they encroach upon and the humans and other animals that depend upon both these ecosystem resources and protection. While there is little local managers can do to prevent large scale changes such as sea rise and increased storm severity, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature and The Nature Conservancy there are ten strategies land managers can do to increase viability and promote resilience.These are:
- 1) Apply risk-spreading strategies to address the uncertainties of climate change.
- 2) Identify and protect critical areas that are naturally positioned to survive climate change.
- 3) Manage human stresses on mangroves.
- 4) Establish greenbelts and buffer zones to allow for mangrove migration in response to sea-level rise, and to reduce impacts from adjacent land-use practices.
- 5) Restore degraded areas that have demonstrated resistance or resilience to climate change.
- 6) Understand and preserve connectivity between mangroves and sources of freshwater and sediment, and between mangroves and their associated habitats like coral reefs and seagrasses.
- 7) Establish baseline data and monitor the response of mangroves to climate change.
- 8) Implement adaptive strategies to compensate for changes in species ranges and environmental conditions.
- 9) Develop alternative livelihoods for mangrove dependent communities as a means to reduce mangrove destruction.
- 10) Build partnerships with a variety of stakeholders to generate the necessary finances and support to respond to the impacts of climate change.