PLANT-AND-ANIMAL COMMUNITIES (continued)
Cypress Head
Standing out conspicuously on the glades landscape
are tall, domelike tree islands of baldcypress. Unlike hammocks, which
occupy elevations, cypress heads, or domes, occupy depressions in the
limestone bedrockareas that remain as ponds or wet places during
seasons when the glades dry up. Water-loving cypresses need only a thin
accumulation of peat and soil to begin their growth in these depressions
or in smaller solution holes in the limestone.
Though most conifers retain their needles all year,
baldcypresses shed their foliage in winter. The fallen needles decay,
forming acids that dissolve the limestone further; thus these trees tend
to enlarge their own ponds. Since the pond is deeper in the middle, and
the accumulation of peat is greater there, the taller trees grow in the
center of the head, with the smaller ones toward the edge. Hence the
characteristic dome-shaped profile.
CYPRESS HEAD. (click on image for an enlargement in a new window)
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Usually when fire sweeps the glades, the bald
cypresses, occupying low, wet spots, are not injured. But with extended
drought, the water disappears and the peat may burn for months, killing
all the baldcypresses.
The cypress heads sometimes serve as alligator holes,
where the big reptiles and other aquatic animals are able to survive dry
periods. As you drive along the park road, stop and examine these tree
islands through your binoculars; they are favored haunts of many of the
park's larger wading birds. Look for herons, egrets, wood storks, and
white ibis, which visit these swampy habitats to feed on the abundant
aquatic life.
TURKEY VULTURE.
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Bald eagles find the tops of the tallest cypresses
advantageous perches from which to scan the marsh. And at night certain
of the cypress heads are "buzzard roosts"resting areas for
gatherings of hundreds of turkey vultures.
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