Comunidades de plantas nativas de Florida

Coastal Strand

  • Stabilized dunes in Cayo Costa State Park.  Photo by Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter

  • Coastal strand in the Canaveral National Seashore near Titusville. Photo by Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter

Las fotografías pertenecen a los fotógrafos que permiten su uso únicamente para fines de FNPS.

Información

Variantes de la comunidad:

Stabilized Dunes, Coastal Thickets

Descripción:

Coastal strands are densely vegetated habitats that develop on sandy or mixed sand–shell substrates along active coastlines, often on barrier islands. These systems are shaped by salt spray and high winds and are subject to rapid reconfiguration—or even destruction—during hurricanes and storm surges.


Vegetation

The community is typically dominated by dense thickets of xerophytic shrubs and small trees, including:

  • Sea grape ( Coccoloba uvifera )
  • Prickly-pear cactus ( Opuntia stricta )
  • Poison ivy ( Toxicodendron radicans )
  • Spanish bayonet ( Yucca aloifolia )
  • Wax myrtle ( Morella cerifera )
  • Sea myrtle ( Baccharis halimifolia )
  • Coral bean ( Erythrina herbacea )
  • Saw palmetto ( Serenoa repens )
  • Other salt- and wind-tolerant shrubs

Referencias:

Duever, L. C. (1986). Florida’s natural communities: Overwash plains and coastal berms. The Palmetto, 6(1), 10–11. http://fnps.org/assets/pdf/palmetto/v06i1p10duever.pdf


Duever, L. (1983, November). Florida’s natural communities: Coastal dunes. The Palmetto, 3(4), 4–5. http://fnps.org/assets/pdf/palmetto/v03i4p4duever.pdf


Duever, L. (1985–1986, Winter). Florida’s natural communities: Coastal mounds. The Palmetto, 5(4), 15. http://fnps.org/assets/pdf/palmetto/v05i4p15duever.pdf


Florida Department of Environmental Protection. (1992). Soil and water relationships of Florida's ecological communities. http://www.dep.state.fl.us/water/wetlands/delineation/docs/soil-and-water.pdf


Florida Natural Areas Inventory. (2010). Guide to the natural communities of Florida: 2010 edition. Florida Natural Areas Inventory. http://fnai.org/naturalcommguide.cfm


Gann, G. D., Bradley, K. A., & Woodmansee, S. W. (2009). Floristic inventory of South Florida database. Institute for Regional Conservation. http://regionalconservation.org/ircs/database/database.asp


Knight, G. R., Oetting, J. B., & Cross, L. (2011). Atlas of Florida's natural heritage: Biodiversity, landscapes, stewardship and opportunities. Institute of Science and Public Affairs, Florida State University.


Myers, R. L., & Ewel, J. J. (Eds.). (1990). Ecosystems of Florida. University of Central Florida Press.


U.S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. (198?). 26 ecological communities of Florida. http://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00000110/00001


Whitney, E. N., Means, D. B., & Rudloe, A. (2004). Priceless Florida: Natural ecosystems and native species. Pineapple Press.


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Tierras altas xéricas (muy secas)

Tierras altas algo secas

Tierras altas húmedas

Tierras rocosas

llanuras húmedas

Humedales de la cuenca

Humedales de filtración

Humedales con aguas de movimiento lento

Humedales de llanura aluvial

Arroyos

Lagos y estanques

Tierras altas costeras

Humedales costeros