sand dunes

Pine Rockland Restoratio...

PINE ROCKLAND RESTORATION

There is less than 5% of the original pine rockland habitat left in Florida.  Pine rockland is a globally critically imperiled habitat with a rich diversity of unique flora and fauna.  There are still new species being discovered frequently in the remaining fragments.  Zoo Miami grounds contain part of the largest fragment of pine rockland left outside Everglades National Park, called the Richmond Tract.  Although most of it has been designated to be protected from future development, it is under constant assault from invasive plant species.  These invasive plants must be removed and the disturbed areas restored to help protect this valuable natural resource.

With a long list of federally and state-protected species occurring on the property, some of which occur nowhere else in the world, it is Zoo Miami’s responsibility to ensure that this special habitat exists for future generations.  Most of the area which is now the city of Miami was built on former pine rockland due to its higher elevation and well-draining rocky substrate.  Looking at a pine rockland forest is seeing what most of Miami actually looked like until a relatively short time ago.  With pine rockland fragments in the Keys and Caribbean being destroyed by sea level rise, saltwater intrusion from hurricanes, fire suppression, and development, preserving the remaining area around Zoo Miami becomes even more important.

Zoo Miami staff, the Environmentally Endangered Lands program, and Miami-Dade County Natural Areas Management work together to protect the pine rockland from disturbance and help control the invasive plant species which threaten it.  They must also work together to conduct regular prescribed burns since it is a highly fire-dependent habitat.  Several areas that had soil disturbance years ago are now home to invasive plants that spread and out-compete the native plants.  These areas serve as seed banks for the invasives to spread into the healthy pine rockland and must be reclaimed and replanted with native pine rockland plants to remove the threat.  The actual plantings are often turned into public awareness and volunteer events to invest the local community in their preservation.  Constant maintenance is needed to keep the invasive plants at bay due to South Florida’s climate and the large number of new invading plants that are introduced each year into the region.


Finishing Off Second Restoration Site

Although the COVID 19 pandemic has slowed down our restoration plans in 2020, we were still able to organize a family friendly and safe restoration event that saw the completion of our second restoration site on zoo grounds. Made possible through funding from the AZA's Spring Into Action campaign, several Zoo Miami member families came out over two separate session on a beautiful Saturday in November to plant over 400 plants from dozens of different pine rockland native species. Many of the species planted were imperiled and/or presumed to have been extirpated from the property. Members were even able to participate in an experimental planting of dozens of the federally endangered Florida Bickell-bush (Brickellia mosieri ) with a conservation botanist and former Zoo Miami intern, Lydia Cuni, from Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden. Fairchild also donated over a hundred other plant species to be incorporated into the restoration, which many are difficult to locate in local native nurseries. #azaspringintoaction

Posted by Frank Ridgley at 12:00