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Water utilization of tropical hardwood hammocks of the Lower Florida Keys
Authors:Naomi Ish-Shalom  Leonel da Silveira Lobo Sternberg  Michael Ross  Joseph O'Brien  Laura Flynn
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biology, University of Miami, P.O. Box 249118, 33124 Coral Gables, FL, USA;(2) National Audubon Society, 115 Indian Mound Trail, 33070 Tavernier, FL, USA
Abstract:Summary Predawn water potential of representative plant species, together with stable isotope composition of stem water and potential water sources were investigated in four low-elevation tropical hardwood hammocks in the Lower Florida Keys, during a one year period. Hammock species had the lowest water potentials when soil water content was low and/or soil salinity was high, but differences in groundwater salinity had no effect on the water potential. Comparison of D/H ratio of plant stem water with soil and ground water corroborates the conclusion that they are primarily utilizing soil water and not groundwater. Thus, tropical hardwood hammocks are buffered from saline groundwater, and are able to thrive in areas where groundwater salinity is as high as 25permil. The effect of sea level rise on these forests may depend more on changes in the frequency of tidal inundation of the soil surface than on changes in groundwater salinity.
Keywords:Tropical hardwood hammock  Salinity  Stable isotope ratio  Water relations  Groundwater
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