Title: Estero Bay Tributaries Riparian Vegetation Analysis
1Estero Bay Tributaries Riparian Vegetation
Analysis
- Edwin M. Everham III, David W. Ceilley, Brenda
Thomas, Daniel Hamilton, E. Corrie Pieterson,
Robert Leisure III, Brad Kolhoff, Jason Hahner, - Jeff Key, and Mary Kay Cassani
2Objectives
- Investigate riparian vegetation change in
response to changing freshwater flow in
tributaries to Estero Bay - Historical analysis of vegetative change
- Establishment of long-term study plots to track
future changes - Attempt to develop vegetative indicators of
changes to freshwater flow
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4Methods Historical Analysis
- Analyzed change in the five tributaries to Estero
Bay Estero River, Hendry Creek, Imperial River,
Mullock Creek, and Spring Creek - Aerial photography from 1966, 1981, and 2002
- preliminary identification of vegetative
communities in 2002, with ground-truthing - Identified five broad vegetative communities
- mangrove
- mixed riparian
- mixed upland
- human landscapes
- agriculture
- GIS map of 100-meter zone on both sides of each
tributary
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9Summary of change by land use category for each
tributary 1966-1981 and 1982-2002
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11Historical Analysis
- Development occurred at different times along
different tributaries. - Agriculture replaced by residential 1966-81
- Uplands lost to residential 1981-02
- Buffers lost early, protected later
- Mangroves did not appear to move
- Exotics may have increased over time
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12Methods Transect Establishment
- Three transects were established at each
tributary (upper-middle-lower) - middle transect was placed at the estimated
transition point between freshwater and estuarine
systems, the upstream extent of tidal influence. - two additional transects were placed
approximately 0.5 1.0 km above and below this
point. - Each transect is 50 meters long, and 5 m wide to
include emergent vegetation along the shore. -
- The transects were sub-divided into 5m sections,
providing a 5 m by 5 m sampling unit.
13Methods Field Data Collection
- Within each 25 m2 unit (each 5 m section of the 5
m wide transect), we - Estimated percent cover for 126 species found
- Measured mapped all woody stems 10 cm or larger
in diameter at breast height (dbh) - recorded canopy density, and
- measured the vertical structure of the
vegetation.
14Figure 4 - Cluster of all Taxa. Hierarchical
clustering of stream transects based on
Bray-Curtis similarity of plant community
structure (cumulative totals for species
coverage/transect). Similarity profile test
(SIMPROF) indicates that there are six
significantly different (Plt0.05) groupings
(labeled in black). Slice indicates 42
similarity level.
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21Conclusions
- Riparian vegetation mapping was able to document
trends in land use change the possible effects
of regulations 1966-2002 - Exotics species appear to be good indicators of
historical shoreline disturbance and human
encroachment. - cover by freshwater and saltwater plants may
serve as tools for establishing minimum flows and
levels (MFLs) on tidally influenced streams. - Indicator groups may be better than whole
community assessments for diagnostic purposes. - Long-term study plots have been established for
detecting changes to shoreline communities over
time.