PLANT-AND-ANIMAL COMMUNITIES
To know Everglades, you must become acquainted with
some of its diverse communities. The physical conditions determining the
existence of a particular community may seem subtlejust a few inches
difference in elevation, or an accumulation of peat in a depression in
the limestone bedrock, for example. But often, the change in your
surroundings as you step from one community to another is startlingfor
it is abrupt and complete. In Everglades, the dividing line between two
habitats may separate an almost entirely different association of plants
and animals.
Use the trails that have been laid out to help you
see the communities. They make access easy for you; the rest is up to
you. Be observant: notice the stemlike root of a saw-palmetto in a damp
pothole of the pineland; look closely at the periphyton that plays such
an important role in the glades food chain. Note the difference in
feeding methods of wading birds; each species has its own niche in the
habitat. Most of all, get into the habit of thinking of each animal,
each plant, as a member of the closely woven web of life that makes up
an integrated community.
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