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A. Mangroves

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Title: A. Mangroves Author: King Last modified by: Dr. Kevin Fitzsimmons Created Date: 9/30/2004 6:01:30 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A. Mangroves


1
A. Mangroves
  • Or Mangal
  • from mangue (tree) and grove (stand of trees)
  • Replace salt marsh as the dominant coastal
    ecosystem in subtropical and tropical regions
  • Facultative halophytes

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c. Distribution
  1. 240,000 km2 worldwide
  2. 2,700 km2 in Florida
  3. 68 spp worldwide
  4. 10 spp in the Americas

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Distribution Continued
  • Found on coastlines between 25? N and 25?S
    latitude, dependent on temperature
  • Rhizophora - survive 2-4? C for 24 hrs
  • Avicennia survives 2-4? C for several days

4
B. Three Main Genera
  1. Rhizophora (red mangrove)
  2. R. mangal and R. racemosa most common New World
    spp
  3. High prop roots and dangling roots are common
    (Figure 11-8)
  4. More cold tolerant

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  • b. Avicenna (black mangrove)
  • i. A. germanaus most common in New World
  • ii. Can tolerate very high salinity (60 ppt) and
    very anoxic conditions
  • iii. Known for having pneumatophores

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  • Lagunicularia (white mangrove)
  • L. racemosa most common in New World
  • Affinity for lower salinity areas

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C. Geomorphological settings
  1. need gentle wave/tidal action to bring nutrients
  2. salinity allows them to out compete FW species

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D. Hydrodynamic settings
  • Fringe protected shorelines, some canals,
    rivers and lagoons
  • Grow to 13 m tall
  • Accumulate organic matter
  • Found in S. Fla, Puerto Rico, Mexico, Texas
  • Avicennia found in salinity to 59 ppt, Rhizophora
    to 39 ppt
  • Overwash islands one type of fringe mangrove
  • Rhizophora dominated
  • sensitive to ocean pollution

14
b. Riverine along tidal affected rivers
  1. Grow to 21 m tall
  2. Rhizophora dominated, but with few prop roots
  3. Avicennia and Lagunicularia also present
  4. Salinity 10-20 ppt

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c. Basin- inland depressions, behind fringe, in
stagnant water
  • Grow to 9m tall
  • Soil conditions highly anoxic, saline
  • Avicennia and Lagunicularia with many
    pneumatophores
  • If salinity gt50ppt Avicennia, if low
    lagunicularia, 30-40ppt mixed forest

16
d. Dwarf isolated, low productivity, low FW,
low nutrients
  1. Grow to 2-5m shrubs
  2. Fringe of everglades, Florida Keys
  3. Hammock one type
  4. buildup of peat
  5. Rhizophora dominated

17
E. Understory lacking due to variety of
stressors
  • Mangrove ferns (Acrostichum spp) are common, 3
    spp worldwide

18
F. Salinity
  1. Not required for mangroves
  2. Much higher in soil than in water

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G. Zonation
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H. Adaptations
  • Salinity exclusion and excretion
  • Prop roots and drop roots Rhizophora
  • Pneumatophores Avicennia 20-30 cm above
    sediment
  • Lenticels found on a b, let oxygen into plant,
    moves through arenchyma to root rhizosphere
  • Viviporous seedlings Rhizophora seeds
    germinate on tree
  • i. Hypocotyls (seedling) drops, floats till
    touches sediment, roots

24
Crabs mangrove maintenance
  1. Burrow, oxygenate soil, drag leaves into soil,
    aid in decomposition
  2. Selectively eat dropped hypocotyls

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J. Hurricanes
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Hurricanes Continued
  • mangrove succession to stable community in
    average time between major hurricanes
  • Wipe out larger mangroves, small trees in gaps
    survive and act as a seed bank

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K. Mangrove effects on estuaries
  1. Net export of organic matter and nutrients
  2. Provides nursery areas and food sources for
    fisheries

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