PLANT-AND-ANIMAL COMMUNITIES (continued)
Bayhead
Many of the tree islands in the fresh-water glades
are of the type called bayhead. Growing in depressions in the limestone
or from beds of peat built up on the bedrock, these plant communities
contain a variety of trees, including swamp holly, redbay, sweetbay, wax
myrtle, and cocoplum. Some of them, on the fringes of the brackish zone,
are marked by clumps of graceful paurotis palms growing at their
edges.
BAYHEAD. (click on image for an enlargement in a new window)
|
Like the hardwood hammocks in the pinelands, bayheads
are prevented from taking over the entire glades ecosystem by the
dry-season fires that sweep the region at irregular intervals. The fires
do not always affect the bayheads. A moat, formed by the dissolving
action of acids from decaying plant materials on the limestone, may
surround the tree island, providing some protection from fire. Wildlife
concentrates in these moats during the dry season. Birds congregate here
to harvest the fish, snails, and other aquatic lifeand
occasionally themselves fall prey to lurking alligators.
|