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Water source utilization and nutrient status in tree islands in Shark River Slough, Everglades National Park

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Water source utilization and nutrient status in tree islands in Shark River Slough, Everglades National Park. Tree island sites. Profile of a tree island. Vegetation zones on a tree island - Chekika. Emergent Hardwoods. Floodtolerant veg. Sawgrass/Slough. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Tree island sites

Water source utilization and nutrient status in tree islands in Shark River Slough,

Everglades National Park

Page 2: Tree island sites

Tree island sites

Page 3: Tree island sites

Profile of a tree island

Page 4: Tree island sites

Vegetation zones on a tree island - Chekika

Emergent Hardwoods

Floodtolerant veg.

Sawgrass/Slough

Page 5: Tree island sites

Wet season: Two POSSIBLE water sources in tree islands

1. Soilwater – rain trapped in leaf litter – NUTRIENT RICH2. Regional surface/groundwater – NUTRIENT POOR

These two sources can be ISOTOPICALLY DISTINCT

Page 6: Tree island sites

Evaporating pool of water = enriched in heavy isotopeAllows for differentiating pools of water

Water(H2O):

Hydrogen has 2 isotopes – 1H (lighter) and 2H (heavier)

Oxygen has two major isotopes -- 16O (lighter) and 18O (heavier)

Stable isotopes of water

10001‰)(tan

xRR

dards

sample

Page 7: Tree island sites

D (o

/oo)

WAT

ER

18O (o/oo) WATER

D=(8*

18 O)+10 Meteoric

Water

Soil Water

Wet

Dry

WetDry

Page 8: Tree island sites
Page 9: Tree island sites
Page 10: Tree island sites

Fig 3b. Blue dots indicate sampling stations on tree island.Yellow and orange dots represent actual trees sampledaround station.

ENP Tree Islands - sites and methods

• Nutrient sampling: every 2 months for 1 year

• Foliar N and P

• Water sampling: for 1 year-Rainwater on Grossman Hammock

-Soil water (organic horizon) ( every 2 months )

-Plant stem water ( every 2 months )• Cryogenic distillation of soil and stem

water• Isotopic analysis on mass

spectrometer

Chekika – airboat/helicopterSatinLeaf – airboat/on footGrossman Hammock – car/foot

Per island:20 upland plants30 lowland plants:1. Sawgrass-flooded ecotone2. Flooded – hammock ecotone

Page 11: Tree island sites

Results so far… Chekika

nov plant stem waters

-50.0

-40.0

-30.0

-20.0

-10.0

0.0

10.0

20.0

30.0

-8.0 -6.0 -4.0 -2.0 0.0 2.0 4.0

O18

2H

SL1 flooded

SL2 f looded

upland hardw oods

rain

met w ater line

Page 12: Tree island sites

acknowledgementsLeo Sternberg - advisorFernando Miralles-Wilhelm (FIU) – PI on NSF Biocomplexity ProjectMike Ross (FIU) – collaboration and logistics on tree islands

Fieldwork and LabworkPablo Ruiz, Mike Klein, Brooke Shamblin, Daniel Gomez, Diane, Jeanette, Astrid, Anita , Daniel Ramirez, John Cozza, Eric, Hao, Patrick Ellsworth, Xin Wang, Patricia, Maria Camila Pinzon, Cassandra

My committee – Don DeAngelis, David Janos, Leo Sternberg, Fernando Miralles-Wilhelm

Funding: NSF Biocomplexity in the Environment project

Page 13: Tree island sites