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4.3.1 Canopy Density .........................................................................................................................................31
4.3.2 Understory Density ...................................................................................................................................32
4.3.3 Herb Layer ................................................................................................................................................32
4.3.4 Edges.........................................................................................................................................................33
4.4 RARE ORGANISMS .............................................................................................................................................33
4.4.1 Plants ........................................................................................................................................................33
4.4.2 Animals .....................................................................................................................................................34
4.5 EXOTIC ORGANISMS ..........................................................................................................................................35
4.5.1 Plants ........................................................................................................................................................35
4.5.2 Animals .....................................................................................................................................................36
4.6 FIRE MANAGEMENT...........................................................................................................................................37
4.6.1 Hardwood Control ....................................................................................................................................37
4.6.2 Fire Breaks................................................................................................................................................37
4.6.3 Prescribed Burning ...................................................................................................................................38
4.6.4 Alternatives to Prescribed Burning...........................................................................................................39
4.7 MANAGEMENT AFTER TROPICAL CYCLONES .....................................................................................................39
4.8 HYDROLOGICAL RESTORATION .........................................................................................................................40
4.9 SOIL MANAGEMENT ..........................................................................................................................................40
4.10 CULTURAL RESOURCES ...................................................................................................................................41
4.11 POLLUTION CONTROL......................................................................................................................................41
4.12 LANDSCAPING CONSIDERATIONS.....................................................................................................................41
4.13 OFF-SITE EXOTIC PLANT AND ANIMAL SOURCES ............................................................................................42
4.14 RESTORATION OF PINE ROCKLAND ON DEGRADED SOILS ...............................................................................42
4.15 SECURITY ........................................................................................................................................................43
4.16 PARTNERSHIPS.................................................................................................................................................43
5.0 PUBLIC USE OF THE PINE ROCKLAND EEL PROPERTIES..................................................................44
6.0 MONITORING, RESEARCH, AND INFORMATION NEEDS ....................................................................45
7.0 LITERATURE CITED .......................................................................................................................................46
APPENDIX A: SCIENTIFIC NAMES TABLE
APPENDIX B: HISTORICAL PICTURES OF PINE ROCKLANDS
APPENDIX C: LIST OF FLORIDA INVASIVE PLANTS
EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Page iv
List of Tables
Table 1: Seedling pine plantings on Miami-Dade County preserves
Table 2: Rare plant species which occur in Miami-Dade County EEL preserves
Table 3: Rare animal species that utilize pine rockland in Miami-Dade County
Table 4: Exotic animals commonly present in pine rocklands in Miami-Dade County
Table 5: Pine rockland fragments suitable for acquisition in Miami-Dade County
List of Figures
Figure 1: Historical pine rockland habitat distribution in Miami-Dade County.
Figure 2: Current versus historical pine rockland habitat distribution in Miami-Dade
County.
List of Acronyms
DERM Department of Environmental Resources Management
EEL Environmentally Endangered Lands
ENP Everglades National Park
FLEPPC Florida Exotic Pest Plant Council
FNAI Florida Natural Areas Inventory
FTBG Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden
FWCC Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
GIS Geographic Information System
IRC The Institute for Regional Conservation
MDC Miami-Dade County
NAM Natural Areas Management
NFC Natural Forest Community
RIFA Red Imported Fire Any
SSC Species of Special Concern
USFWS United States Fish and Wildlife Service
EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Page 1
1.0 Introduction
Pine rocklands are one of the priority ecosystems for conservation efforts in the Miami-Dade
County (MDC) Environmentally Endangered Lands (EEL) Program. As settlers arrived in the
area that is now Miami-Dade County, they found that rocklands in the Miami Rock Ridge, in
general, were the most suitable areas for settlement. The relatively high elevation of the pine
rocklands in the landscape provided reasonable protection against flooding, while allowing the
people to remain close to valuable natural resources such as agricultural soils, timber, and
fisheries.
Unfortunately, this ecosystem has now been almost entirely destroyed by agricultural, urban, and
suburban development. Current estimates suggest that less than 1.8% of the original 126,500
acres of pine rockland ecosystem outside of Everglades National Park (ENP) remains today in
Miami-Dade County. These approximately 2,273 acres of pine rocklands exist in scattered, small
parcels. Furthermore, the pine rockland fragments that do remain have suffered from impacts of
forest fragmentation, fire suppression, exotic pest invasions, and other forms of disturbance.
Therefore, pine rockland fragments that have been acquired by the EEL program must be
managed to ensure their long term viability.
1.1 Overview of the Pine Rockland Ecosystem
The pine rockland ecosystem is the most diverse ecosystem in the EEL program. This ecosystem
contains a wide-ranging assemblage of rare plants and animals. Many organisms restricted to the
habitat are endemic, occurring nowhere else in the world. These organisms are part of a diverse
system that is influenced by a number of natural stressors, such as fires, the regular occurrence of
tropical cyclones, and the rather sporadic incidence of frosts. These natural processes shape the
structure and composition of pine rocklands and determine the ecological characteristics of the
ecosystem.
The pine rockland ecosystem is a pine woodland growing in a thin layer of sand or loam in a
matrix of exposed oolitic limestone substrate. Pre-drainage hydrology of pine rocklands varied
greatly depending upon elevation, with some pine rocklands probably never flooding and others
probably flooding annually for short periods during the summer wet season. Typically pine
rocklands consist of three vegetation layers – a canopy, a subcanopy, and an herb layer. The
canopy of pine rocklands is dominated by a single species, South Florida slash pine1
. The
subcanopy of pine rocklands consists of an array of temperate and tropical hardwoods and palms.
Palms in this layer include saw palmetto, cabbage palm, and silver palm, with saw palmetto
being the most common and typically a dominant species in all pine rockland areas. The herb
layer consists of temperate and tropical forbs, grasses, ferns, and sedges. At present, examples of
the common herbs in pine rocklands are the pine fern, low rattlebox, and Florida five-petalled
leafflower (Bradley, unpublished data).
Pine rockland occurs in South Florida and on several islands in the Bahamian archipelago. In
southern Florida, it is found in Miami-Dade County, Monroe County in the lower Florida Keys,