PLANT-AND-ANIMAL COMMUNITIES (continued)
Tropical Hardwood Hammock
Generally, in south Florida, hardwood hammocks
develop only in areas protected from fire, flood, and saline waters. The
land must be high enough (1 to 3 feet above surrounding levels) to stand
above the water that covers the glades much of the year. The roots of
the trees must be out of the water and must have adequate aeration. In
the park, these conditions prevail on the limestone "ridge" (elevation
of which ranges from 3 to 7 feet above sea level) and some spots in the
glades region. On the limestone ridge, in areas bypassed by fires for a
long period, hammocks have developed. Pines grow in the surrounding
areas, where repeated fires have held back the hardwoods.
The moats that tend to form around glades hammocks,
as acids from decaying plant materials dissolve the limestone, hold
water even during the dry season; the moats thus act as barriers
protecting the hammock vegetation from glades fires.
When the white man took over southern Florida, these
hammocks were luxuriant jungle islands dominated by towering tropical
hardwoods and palms. Stumps and logs on the floors of some of the
remaining hammocks, attesting to the enormous size of some of the
earlier trees, are sad reminders of the former grandeur of the hammocks.
While most of south Florida's hammocks have been destroyed, you can
still see some fine ones protected in the park. At Royal Palm Hammock,
near park headquarters, Gumbo Limbo Trail winds through a dim, dense
forest that would otherwise be almost impenetrable except to a
snake.
TROPICAL HARDWOOD HAMMOCK. (click on image for an enlargement in a new window)
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Stepping into a jungle hammock from either the
sunbathed glades or the open pine forest is a sudden, dramatic change.
The contrast when you enter Gumbo Limbo Trail immediately after walking
the Anhinga Trail is striking. While the watery world of Anhinga is
dominated by a noisy profusion of wildlife, the environment of Gumbo
Limbo will seem to be a mere tangle of vegetation. But the jungle
hammock, too, has its community of animalseven though you may notice
none but mosquitoes. Many of its denizens are nocturnal in their habits,
but if you remain alert you will observe birds, invertebrates, and
perhaps a lizard.
The trees that envelop you as you walk on Gumbo Limbo
Trail are mostly tropical species; of the dominant trees, only the live
oak (which grows as far north as Virginia) can be considered
non-tropical. Under oaks and tropical bustics, poisonwood, mastics, and
gumbo-limbos grow small trees such as tetrazygia, rough-leaf velvetseed,
and wild coffee, a multitude of mosses and ferns, and only a few species
of shade-tolerant flowering plants. Orchids and air plants burst like
sun stars from limbs, trunks, and fallen logs. Twining among them all,
the woody vines called lianas enhance the jungle atmosphere. Adding a
final touch are the royal palms that here and there tower over the
hardwood canopyoccasionally reaching 125 feet.
The limestone rock that underlies the entire park is
porous and soluble; consequently the floor of the hammock is pitted with
solution holes dissolved by the acid from decaying vegetation. Soil and
peat accumulating in the water-filled bottom of one of these holes
supports a plant community of its own: perhaps a pond apple, surrounded
by ferns and mosses (including some varieties that seem to be limited to
this pothole environment).
A dead, decaying log on the ground may support
another miniature plant communitya carpet of mosses, ferns, and
other small plants that thrive in such moist situations.
TREE SIGNALS. There are 52 color forms of Liguus
fasciatus found in south Florida.
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Strangest of the hammock plants is the strangler fig,
which first gets a foothold in the rough bark of a live oak, cabbage
palm, or other tree. It then sends roots down to the ground, entwining
about the host tree as it grows, and eventually killing it. On the Gumbo
Limbo Trail you will see a strangler fig that grew in this manner and
was enmeshed by another strangler figwhich now is threatened by a third
fig that already has gained a foothold in its branches.
Best known of the glades hammocks is Mahogany
Hammock. A boardwalk trail in this lush, junglelike tree island leads
past the giant mahogany tree for which the hammock was namednow,
because of Hurricane Donna, a dismembered giant. This fine tree island
was explored only after the park was established.
An array of large and small vertebrate animals,
mostly representative of the Temperate Zone, populates these tropical
hardwood jungles: raccoons and opossums, many varieties of birds, snakes
and lizards, tree frogs, even bobcats and the rare Florida panther, or
cougar. Not surprisingly, in vertebratesincluding insects and
snailsabound in this luxuriant plant community. The tropical influence
is evident in the presence of invertebrates such as tree snails of the
genus Liguus, known outside of Florida only in Hispaniola and
Cuba.
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