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Heterogeneity of phosphorus distribution in a patterned landscape, the Florida Everglades

Authors :
Paul R. Wetzel
William H. Orem
Arnold G. van der Valk
Carlos Coronado
Tiffany G. Troxler-Gann
Fred H. Sklar
Susan Newman
Daniel L. Childers
Source :
Plant Ecology. 200:83-90
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2008.

Abstract

The biologically mediated transfer of nutrients from one part of a landscape to another may create nutrient gradients or subsidize the productivity at specific locations. If limited, this focused redistribution of the nutrient may create non-random landscape patterns that are unrelated to underlying environmental gradients. The Florida Everglades, USA, is a large freshwater wetland that is patterned with tree islands, elevated areas that support woody vegetation. A survey of 12 tree islands found total soil phosphorus levels 3–114 times greater on the island head than the surrounding marsh, indicating that the Florida Everglades is not a homogeneous oligotrophic system. It was estimated that historically 67% of the phosphorus entering the central Everglades was sequestered on tree islands, which are ~3.8% of the total land area. This internal redistribution of phosphorus onto tree islands due to the establishment of trees may be one reason that marshes have remained oligotrophic and may explain the spatial differentiation of the patterned Everglades landscape.

Details

ISSN :
15735052 and 13850237
Volume :
200
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0736564a24bc2d83b8d5199ec5bf5894