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Microhabitat and time-since-fire: effects on demography oF Eryngium cuneifolium (Apiaceae), a Florida scrub endemic plant
Authors:Eric S Menges  Jennifer Kimmich
Institution:Archbold Biological Station, P.O. Box 2057, Lake Placid, Florida, 33862
Abstract:Eryngium cuneifolium Small. (Apiaceae) is a narrowly distributed endemic found only in Ceratiola ericoides (Florida rosemary)-dominated Florida scrub, a periodically burned, shrub-dominated habitat. Multivariate analyses using 22 ???microhabitat characteristics indicated significant microhabitat and time-since-fire effects on survival, growth, and fecundity of 1287 individuals over a 4-yr period. Survival increased with distance to the nearest shrub, and plants in larger open patches had greater survival rates. Neighboring shrubs of Ceratiola ericoides and Calamintha ashei were associated with a higher mortality of E. cuneifolium than other neighboring shrub species. Survival was reduced by two-thirds over 4 yr (14% vs. 42%) for E. cuneifolium near C. ericoides. Sand accretion increased growth and fecundity. With greater time since fire, woody shrubs increasingly dominate and open patches shrink, significantly reducing survival, growth, and fecundity of E. cuneifolium. Effects were particularly dramatic between 2 and 7 yr postfire, when annual mortality increased from <10% to >30% (r = 0.74). This herbaceous species is dependent on an open habitat maintained by periodic fire. Belowground competition or allelopathy from shrubs probably restricts E. cuneifolium to recently burned, open patches within the most xeric parts of Florida scrub.
Keywords:Ceratiola ericoides  demography  Eryngium cuneifolium  fire  Florida scrub  Lake Wales Ridge  microhabitat  sand accretion
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