projects > effects of water hardness on slough-wet prairie plant communities of the a.r.m. loxahatchee national wildlife refuge
Effects of Water Hardness on Slough-Wet Prairie Plant Communities of the A.R.M. Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge
Alterations to ground-water and surface-water hydrology and water chemistry in south Florida have contributed to increased flows of mineral-rich (i.e., hard water) canal water into historically rainfall-driven (soft water) areas of the Everglades. The interior of the A.R.M. Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge largely has retained its historic low conductivity or 'soft-water' condition due to its relative isolation from canal flows. However, recent sampling by USGS and the Refuge has shown that canal influences on water quality extend several km into the Refuge in some areas, and Refuge scientists and managers have expressed concern that these influences may increase depending upon future changes in water management operations. Intrusion of canal waters into the Refuge increase the availability of phosphorus (P), the primary limiting plant nutrient in the Everglades, as well as concentrations of major mineral ions such as Ca2+, Mg2+, and SO42-. While the ecological effects of P enrichment on the Everglades is fairly well understood, potential impacts caused by increased mineral concentrations in this soft-water wetland are largely unknown. Understanding the types and magnitude of these impacts is particularly important given that the area of the Refuge exposed to mineral enrichment is much greater than that exposed to P enrichment. The objective of this project is to determine the effects of increased flows of mineral-rich canal water on the aquatic plant community of the Refuge interior. Slough-wet prairie (SWP) habitats are a major landscape feature in the Refuge, and several SWP plant species may be adapted to the soft-water conditions in the Refuge interior. Increased mineral loads to the Refuge may result in a shift towards a more species-poor and spatially homogeneous community. In addition, there is a small amount of evidence to suggest that mineral enrichment may favor the growth and expansion of sawgrass and a consequent decline in the coverage of SWP habitats. A survey across existing mineral gradients will be performed to document patterns of vegetation change and their relation to changes in water hardness and other (e.g. soil P and hydrology) environmental factors. Laboratory and field experiments will test these correlative relationships to determine the relative importance of increasing water hardness as a cause of observed vegetation changes across canal gradients. Work PlansMetadata |
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey
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Last updated: 26 August 2008 @ 11:30 AM (BJM)