Title
Variation In Soil Moisture In Relation To Rainfall, Vegetation, Gaps, And Time-Since-Fire In Florida Scrub
Keywords
Fire; Florida scrub; Frequency domain reflectometry; Seasonal variability; Shrublands; Soil moisture
Abstract
Florida scrub is a pyrogenic shrubland ecosystem occurring on well-drained sands derived from contemporary and relictual beach dunes. Despite average annual precipitation > 1300 mm, Florida scrub is dominated by xeromorphic plants. We monitored spatio-temporal variation in soil moisture to determine if the distribution of Florida scrub communities reflects patterns in soil moisture variation. Using frequency domain reflectometry, we measured soil moisture at 24 sampling stations (3 depths per station) in 3 Florida scrub communities (rosemary scrub, scrubby flatwoods, and oak-hickory scrub) at Archbold Biological Station for 3 y (October 1998-September 2001). Stations were arrayed to sample 2 microhabitats (gaps, shrubs) and 2 burn histories. Soil moisture closely tracked cumulative rainfall across widely varying precipitation in the 3 y studied. Soil moisture changed through time and differed significantly among habitats; it was generally highest in scrubby flatwoods, particularly during the wettest periods, and lowest in oak-hickory scrub. Soil moisture was generally greater at deeper depths, in more recently burned sites, and in gaps. Burn effects were particularly pronounced in rosemary scrub, where lack of resprouting dominants after fire maintains more distinct, larger gaps. Burn and gap effects were small in absolute terms, but burned sites and gaps consistently had greater soil moisture than unburned and matrix sites. These small differences may be critical to the germination, establishment, and growth of narrowly endemic plants, particularly in Florida rosemary scrub. However, factors such as competition for nutrients, cryptobiotic soil crust, litter accumulation, gap size, and allelopathy may be more important in influencing distributions of endemic scrub plants.
Publication Date
10-17-2007
Publication Title
Ecoscience
Volume
14
Issue
3
Number of Pages
377-386
Document Type
Article; Proceedings Paper
Personal Identifier
scopus
DOI Link
https://doi.org/10.2980/1195-6860(2007)14[377:VISMIR]2.0.CO;2
Copyright Status
Unknown
Socpus ID
35248857462 (Scopus)
Source API URL
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/35248857462
STARS Citation
Weekley, Carl W.; Gagnon, Daniel; Menges, Eric S.; Quintana-Ascencio, Pedro F.; and Saha, Sonali, "Variation In Soil Moisture In Relation To Rainfall, Vegetation, Gaps, And Time-Since-Fire In Florida Scrub" (2007). Scopus Export 2000s. 6654.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/scopus2000/6654