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Everglades tree island restoration: testing a simple tree planting technique patterned after a natural process
Authors:Thomas W. Dreschel  Eric A. Cline  Steven D. Hill
Affiliation:Everglades Systems Assessment, South Florida Water Management District, West Palm Beach, FL 33406, U.S.A.
Abstract:Tree islands in the Everglades are critical landscape features, but anthropogenic modification of the Everglades during the past century has led to the degradation and loss of many of the tree islands that originally dotted the Everglades landscape. Many of the tree islands have lost elevation and the majority of their woody species such that they are now covered with emergent plants such as sawgrass (Cladium jamaicense). A simple, cost‐effective tree planting technique is needed for restoring degraded Everglades tree islands. We patterned our design after a natural Everglades process that creates floating islands, which promotes tree survival and growth in both flooded and dry conditions and may lead to the development of fixed islands. Commercial peat bags were tested as a means to provide the medium for the growth and establishment of potted tree saplings native to Everglades tree islands. Three tree species (Annona glabra, Ficus aurea, and Acer rubrum) and five treatments were evaluated. The results indicate that the preferred deployed peat‐bag configuration should provide the greatest additional elevation to minimize inundation and be planted with a single Everglades tree island species sapling, with a single commercial tree fertilizer spike inserted for nutrients. Although most plants survived and many thrived for the two‐year period of this study, determining whether the trees planted using this technique can become established will require longer‐term studies and extensive field tests.
Keywords:floating islands  ghost tree islands  peat  pond apple  red maple  strangler fig
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