Everglades Wildguide - Jean Craighead George - E-Book

Everglades Wildguide E-Book

Jean Craighead George

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Beschreibung

"Everglades Wildguide" is an immersive and informative exploration crafted by Jean Craighead George. Within its pages, readers embark on a captivating journey through the unique ecosystem of the Everglades, one of the most iconic and biodiverse regions in the United States.

As an expert naturalist and acclaimed author, George brings her passion for wildlife and conservation to life in this comprehensive guidebook. Through vivid descriptions, stunning photography, and insightful commentary, she invites readers to discover the wonders of the Everglades, from its vast sawgrass prairies to its lush mangrove forests.

The "Everglades Wildguide" serves as an invaluable companion for adventurers, nature enthusiasts, and conservationists alike. It offers practical tips for exploring the region responsibly, including guidance on wildlife viewing, hiking trails, and canoeing routes. Additionally, George provides fascinating insights into the ecology, history, and cultural significance of the Everglades, shedding light on its diverse array of plant and animal species and the efforts to protect and preserve this fragile ecosystem.

More than just a field guide, "Everglades Wildguide" is a celebration of the natural world and a call to action to safeguard its beauty and biodiversity for future generations. Through her eloquent prose and deep reverence for the Everglades, Jean Craighead George inspires readers to forge a deeper connection with nature and become stewards of this remarkable wilderness.

Whether you're planning a visit to the Everglades or simply wish to learn more about this remarkable ecosystem from the comfort of your home, "Everglades Wildguide" is an essential companion that will enrich your understanding and appreciation of one of America's most treasured natural landscapes.

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Copyright 2024

Cervantes Digital

All rights reserved

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

PREFACE

AMERICA’S SUBTROPICAL WONDERLAND

PLANT-AND-ANIMAL COMMUNITIES

DISCOVERING EVERGLADES PLANTS AND ANIMALS

SOME IMPORTANT EVERGLADES MAMMALS

INDIANS OF THE EVERGLADES

GLOSSARY

REFERENCE BOOKS

RARE AND ENDANGERED ANIMALS

 

PREFACE

The shimmering waters of the everglades creep silently down the tip of Florida under warm subtropical skies. In a vast, shallow sheet this lazy river idles through tall grasses and shadowy forests, easing over alligator holes and under bird rookeries, finally mingling with the salty waters of Florida Bay and the Gulf of Mexico in the mangroveswamps. From source to sea, all across the shallow breadth of this watery landscape, life abounds.

Everglades National Park is to most Americans an Eden where birds, mammals, reptiles, and orchids find sanctuary. Sunshine sparkles on sloughs teeming with fish, and on marshes where wildflowers bloom the year around; it shines on tree islands where birds roost and deer bed down. In this semitropical garden of plant-and-animal communities, every breeze-touched glade, every cluster of trees is a separate world in which are tucked yet smaller worlds of such complexity that even ecologists have not learned all their intricate relationships.

This book has been written to help you see how the many pieces of this ecological puzzle fit together to form a complex, ever-changing, closely woven web of plants, animals, rock, soil, sun, water, and air.

AMERICA’S SUBTROPICAL WONDERLAND

 

Everglades may not be our largest national park (that honor belongs to Wrangell-St. Elias in Alaska), but it is certainly the wettest. During and after the rainy season, when not only the mangroveswamp but also the sawgrass prairie is under water, most of the park abounds in fish and other water life, and even the white-tailed deer leads a semi-aquatic existence.

Despite the fact that it is low, flat, and largely under water, Everglades is a park of many environments: shallow, key-dotted Florida Bay; the coastal prairie; the vast mangrove forest and its mysterious waterways; cypress swamps; the true everglades—an extensive freshwater marsh dotted with tree islands and occasional ponds; and the driest zone, the pine-and-hammock rockland.

The watery expanse we call “everglades,” from which the park gets its name, lies only partly within the park boundaries. Originally this river flowed, unobstructed though very slowly, southward from Lake Okeechobee more than 100 miles to Florida Bay. It is hardly recognizable as a river, for it is 50 miles wide and averages only about 6 inches deep, and it creeps rather than flows. Its source, the area around Lake Okeechobee, is only about 15 feet above sea level, and the riverbed slopes southward only 2 or 3 inches to the mile.

As you can see by the maps on pages 2 and 3, the works of man have greatly altered the drainage patterns and the natural values of south Florida, and you can imagine how this has affected the supply of water—the park’s lifeblood.

The park’s array of plants and animals is a blend of tropical species, most of which made their way across the water from the Caribbean islands, and species from the Temperate Zone, which embraces all of Florida. All of these inhabitants exist here through adaptation to the region’s peculiar cycles of flood, drought, and fire and by virtue of subtle variations in temperature, altitude, and soil.

HISTORIC DRAINAGE PATTERNS OF SOUTH FLORIDA

DRAINAGE PATTERNS OF SOUTH FLORIDA TODAY

 

PLANT COMMUNITIES OF EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK

 

The horizontal distance represented on this diagram, from the Pineland to Florida Bay, is 15 miles. With a greatly exaggerated vertical scale, the difference between the greatest elevation of the pine ridge and the bottom of the Florida Bay marl bed is only 14 feet.

 

FLORIDA BAY (SALT WATER)

MUD BANK

KEY

COASTAL PRAIRIE

MANGROVESWAMP (BRACKISH)

BUTTONWOOD LEVEE

TREE-ISLAND GLADES (FRESH WATER)

BAYHEAD

CYPRESS HEAD

WILLOW HEAD

HARDWOOD HAMMOCK

PINE AND HAMMOCK RIDGE

 

Underlying the entire park is porous limestone (see glossary), which was deposited ages ago in warm seas that covered the southern part of today’s Florida peninsula. Over this limestone only a thin mantle of marl and peat provides soil for rooting plants.

Some of the park’s ecosystems (see glossary) are extremely complex. For example, a single jungle hammock of a dozen acres may contain, along with giant live oaks and other plants from the Temperate Zone, many kinds of tropical hardwood trees; a profusion of vines, mosses, ferns, orchids, and air plants; and a great variety of vertebrate and invertebrate animals, from tree snails to the white-tailed deer.

 

Pine Rockland

Entering the park from the northeast, you are on a road traversing the pineland-and-hammock “ridge.” This elevated part of the South Florida limestone bedrock, which at the park entrance is about 6 feet above sea level, is the driest zone in the park. Pine trees, which will grow only on ground that remains above water most of the year, thrive on this rockland.

There is another condition essential to the survival of the pine forest in this region—fire. We usually think of fire as the enemy of forest vegetation; but that is not true here. The pines that grow in this part of Florida have a natural resistance to fire. Their thick, corky bark insulates their trunks from the flames. And strangely enough the fire actually seems to help with pine reproduction; it destroys competing vegetation and exposes the mineral soil seedlings need. If there has been a good cone crop, you will find an abundant growth of pine seedlings after a fire in the pinelands.

What would happen if the pinelands were protected from fire? Examine a pine forest where there have been no recent fires. You will note that there are many small hardwood (broadleaved) trees growing in the shade of the pines. These hardwoods would eventually shade out the light-demanding pine seedlings, and take over as the old pines died off. But under normal conditions, lightning-caused fires sweep at fairly frequent intervals through the pineland. Since the hardwoods have little resistance to fire, they are pruned back.

Before this century, fires burned vast areas. The only barriers were natural waterways—sloughs, lakes and ponds, and estuaries—which retained some water during the rainless season when the rest of the glades and pinelands dried up. Old-timers say that sometimes a fire would travel all the way from Lake Okeechobee to the coastal prairie of Cape Sable (seepage 2). In the pine forest, any area bypassed by these fires for a lengthy period developed into a junglelike island of hardwoods. We call such stands “hammocks,” whether they develop in the pine forest or in the open glades. On the limestone ridge, the hammocks support a community of plants and animals strikingly different from the surrounding pine forests.

PINE AND HAMMOCK RIDGE (elevation: 3 to 7 feet above sea level)

 

SAWGRASS GLADES

PINELAND

HARDWOOD HAMMOCK

PINELAND

1 SOUTH FLORIDA SLASH PINE

2 SAW-PALMETTO

3 COONTIE

4 SAW-PALMETTO AFTER FIRE

 

With the opening up of south Florida for farming and industry, man’s works—particularly roads and canals—soon crisscrossed the region, forming barriers to the spread of the fires. Suppression of fire by farmers, lumbermen, and park managers also lessened their effect. Thus the hardwoods, which previously had been held back by fire, tended to replace the pines. And although the park was established to preserve a patch of primitive subtropical America as it was in earlier centuries, the landscape began to change.

Continued protection of the park from fire would in time eliminate the pineland—a plant community that has little chance to survive elsewhere. So, in Everglades National Park, Smokey Bear must take a back seat: park rangers deliberately set fires to help nature maintain the natural scene. Thus, as you drive down the road to Flamingo, do not be shocked to discover park rangers burning the vegetation. The fires are controlled, of course, and the existing hammocks are not destroyed.

When you visit the park take a close look at the pinelands community. Notice, as you walk on the manmade trail through the pine forest, that the ground on either side of you is extremely rough. The limestone bedrock is visible everywhere; what soil there is has accumulated in the pits and potholes that riddle the bedrock. The trees, shrubs, grasses, and other plants are rooted in these pockets of soil.

The limestone looks rather hazardous to walk on—and it is. You must be careful not to break through a thin shell of rock covering a cavity. This pitted, honeycombed condition is due to the fact that the limestone is easily dissolved by acids. Decaying pine needles, palmetto leaves, and other dead plant materials produce weak acids that continually eat away at the rock.

If a fire has passed through the pineland recently, you may notice that while most of the low-growing plants have been killed, some, such as the saw-palmetto, are sending up new green shoots. The thick, stubby stem of the palmetto lies in a pothole, with its roots in the soil that has accumulated there; even in the dry season the pocket in the limestone remains damp, for water is never very far below the surface in this region. When fire kills the top of the plant, the stem and roots survive, and the palmetto, like the pine, remains a part of the plant community.

A number of other plants of the south Florida pinelands have adapted to the conditions of periodic burning. Coontie (a cycad, from the underground stems of which the Indians made flour) and moon vine (a morningglory) are among many you will see surviving pineland fires severe enough to result in the death or stunting of the hardwood seedlings and saplings.

Sometimes we forget that fire—like water, wind, and sunlight—is a natural force that operates with the others to influence the evolution of plants as well as to shape the landscape.

The pineland, like other plant communities, has its own community of animals. Some of its residents, such as the cotton mouse, opossum, and raccoon, are found in other communities of the park, too.

Some of the pineland animals, however—pine warbler, reef gecko, and five-lined skink, for example—are particularly adapted to this environment. These lovers of sunlight are dependent, like the pine forest, on the occasional natural or manmade fires 11 that hold back the hardwood trees.

The pine rockland is quite different from the other plant-and-animal communities you will see as you drive through the park: it is the only ecosystem you can explore on foot in any season. Other parts of the park are largely flooded during the wet season. Elevated boardwalks have been provided in some of these areas to enable you to penetrate them a short distance from the road.

As you will see, fire plays an important role in some of the other Evergladescommunities, too.

Tree-island Glades (elevation: 1 to 3 feet above sea level)

BAYHEAD

WILLOW HEAD

SAWGRASS

PINE

DWARF CYPRESS FOREST

ALLIGATOR HOLE

CYPRESS HEAD