Title: | LTER: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystem Research | Personnel: | | Individual: | John Kominoski | Organization: | Florida Coastal Everglades Long Term Ecological
Research | Address: | 11200 S.W. 8th Street, | Florida International University, | Miami, FL 33199 US |
| Email Address: | | Id: | https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0978-3326 | Role: | Lead Principal Investigator |
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| Abstract: |
Coastal ecosystems like the Florida Everglades provide many benefits and services to
society including protection from storms, habitat and food for important fisheries,
support of tourism and local economies, filtration of fresh water, and burial and storage
of carbon that offsets greenhouse gas emissions. The Florida Coastal Everglades Long Term
Ecological Research (FCE LTER) program addresses how and why coastal ecosystems and their
services are changing. Like many coastal ecosystems, the Florida Everglades has been
threatened by diversion of fresh water to support urban and agricultural expansion. At the
same time, sea-level rise has caused saltwater intrusion of coastal ecosystems which
stresses freshwater species, causes elevation loss, and contaminates municipal water
resources. However, restoration of seasonal pulses of fresh water may counteract these
threats. Researchers in the FCE LTER are continuing long-term studies and experiments to
understand how changes in freshwater supply, sea-level rise, and disturbances like
tropical storms interact to influence ecosystems and their services. The science team is
guided by a diversity and inclusion plan to attract diverse scientists at all career
stages. The team includes resource managers – who use discoveries and knowledge from the
FCE LTER to guide effective freshwater restoration – and an active community of academic
and agency scientists, teachers and other educators, graduate, undergraduate, and high
school students. The project has a robust education and outreach program that engages the
research team with the general public to advance science discoveries and protection of
coastal ecosystems.
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| Title: | Florida Coastal Everglades LTER: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research-the Coastal Everglades | Personnel: | | Abstract: |
We are investigating how variability in regional climate, freshwater inputs,
disturbance, and perturbations affect the coastal Everglades ecosystem. Our long term
research program focuses on testing the following central idea and hypotheses: Regional
processes mediated by water flow control population and ecosystem level dynamics at any
location within the coastal Everglades landscape. This phenomenon is best exemplified in
the dynamics of an estuarine oligohaline zone where fresh water draining
phosphorus-limited Everglades marshes mixes with water from the more nitrogen-limited
coastal ocean. Hypothesis 1: In nutrient-poor coastal systems, long-term changes in the
quantity or quality of organic matter inputs will exert strong and direct controls on
estuarine productivity, because inorganic nutrients are at such low levels. Hypothesis
2: Interannual and long-term changes in freshwater flow controls the magnitude of
nutrients and organic matter inputs to the estuarine zone, while ecological processes in
the freshwater marsh and coastal ocean control the quality and characteristics of those
inputs. Hypothesis 3: Long-term changes in freshwater flow (primarily manifest through
management and Everglades restoration) will interact with long-term changes in the
climatic and disturbance (sea level rise, hurricanes, fires) regimes to modify
ecological pattern and process across coastal landscapes.
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| Title: | FCE LTER II: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research | Personnel: | | Abstract: |
Our FCE I research focused on understanding how dissolved organic matter from
upstream oligotrophic marshes interacts with a marine source of phosphorus (P), the
limiting nutrient, to control estuarine productivity where these two influences meet-in
the oligohaline ecotone. This dynamic is affected by the interaction of local ecological
processes and landscape-scale drivers (hydrologic, climatological, and human). During
FCE I, our ideas about how these "upside-down" estuaries (Childers et al. 2006) function
has evolved, and we have modified our central theme to reflect this new understanding.
Our focus in FCE II will be even more strongly on the oligohaline ecotone region of our
experimental transects. For FCE II, our overarching theme is: In the coastal Everglades
landscape, population and ecosystem-level dynamics are controlled by the relative
importance of water source, water residence time, and local biotic processes. This
phenomenon is best exemplified in the oligohaline ecotone, where these 3 factors
interact most strongly and vary over many [temporal and spatial] scales.Hypothesis 1:
Increasing inputs of fresh water will enhance oligotrophy in nutrient-poor coastal
systems, as long as the inflowing water has low nutrient content; this dynamic will be
most pronounced in the oligohaline ecotone. Hypothesis 2: An increase in freshwater
inflow will increase the physical transport of detrital organic matter to the
oligohaline ecotone, which will enhance estuarine productivity. The quality of these
allochthonous detrital inputs will be controlled by upstream ecological processes.
Hypothesis 3: Water residence time, groundwater inputs, and tidal energy interact with
climatic and disturbance regimes to modify ecological pattern and process in
oligotrophic estuaries; this dynamic will be most pronounced in the oligohaline ecotone.
Childers, D.L., J.N. Boyer, S.E. Davis, C.J. Madden, D.T. Rudnick, and F.H. Sklar, 2006.
Relating precipitation and water management to nutrient concentration patterns in the
oligotrophic "upside down" estuaries of the Florida Everglades. Limnology and
Oceanography, 51(1): 602-616.
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| Title: | FCE LTER III: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research | Personnel: | | Abstract: |
Coastal ecosystems are being modified at unprecedented rates through
interacting
pressures of global climate change and rapid human population growth, impacting
natural coastal
resources and the services they provide. Located at the base of the shallow-sloping
Florida peninsula, the Everglades wilderness and 6 million human residents are
exceptionally exposed to both pressures. Further, freshwater drainage has accelerated
saltwater intrusion over land and into the porous limestone aquifer, resulting in
coastal ecosystem transgression and seasonal residential freshwater shortages. The
unprecedented landscape-scale Everglades restoration process is expected to reverse some
of these trends. However, it is not clear how uncertainties about climate change
prognoses and their impacts (e.g., sea level rise (SLR), changes in storm activity or
severity, and climate drivers of freshwater availability) may influence human activities
(e.g., population growth, resource use, land-use change), and how their interaction will
affect the restoration process that is already steeped in conflict. The Florida Coastal
Everglades Long-Term Ecological Research (FCE LTER) program is dedicated to long-term
coupled biophysical and cultural studies that expose and unravel complex feedbacks that
generate distinctive patterns and processes in vulnerable coastal ecosystems. The
overarching theme of FCE research is: In the coastal Everglades, climate change and
resource management decisions interact to influence
freshwater availability, ecosystem dynamics, and the value and utilization of
ecosystem services by people. Because they are highly sensitive to the balance of
freshwater and marine influences,
coastal wetlands of the Florida Everglades provide an ideal system to examine how
socio-ecological systems respond to and mitigate the effects of climate change and
freshwater allocation decisions. The trans-disciplinary science conducted by the large
FCE research team is revealing how estuary hydrodynamics and biogeochemistry may tilt on
a fulcrum defined by the magnitude by which coastal pressures (SRL, storms) are
mitigated by freshwater flows. We employ a socio-ecological framework to address how
climate change interacts with political decisions to determine the sustainability of
interconnected human-natural systems. In FCE I, we discovered how coastal nutrient
supplies create an unusual “upside-down” productivity gradient in karstic estuaries. FCE
II research used growing long-term datasets to reveal the sensitivity of this gradient
to changes in hydrodynamics, nutrient availability, and salinity. In FCE III, we will
use South Florida as an exemplary system for understanding how and why socio-ecological
systems resist, adapt to, or mitigate the effects of climate change on ecosystem
sustainability. We will examine how decisions about freshwater delivery to the
Everglades influence -and are influenced by - the impact of SLR in this especially
vulnerable landscape. Biophysical studies will focus on how this balance of fresh and
marine sources influences biogeochemical cycling, primary production, organic matter
dynamics, and trophic dynamics, to drive carbon gains and losses. We expand our
spatio-temporal domain by employing powerful long-term datasets and experiments to
determine legacies of past interactions, and to constrain models that will help guide a
sustainable future for the FCE.
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Related Project:
| Title: | FCE LTER IV: Drivers of Abrupt Change in the Florida Coastal Everglades | Personnel: | | Abstract: |
Coastal ecosystems like the Florida Everglades provide many benefits to society.
They protect coastlines from storms and store carbon. They provide habitat and food for
important fisheries. They also support tourism and local economies, and store freshwater
for millions of people. The Florida Coastal Everglades Long Term Ecological Research
(FCE LTER) program addresses how and why coastal ecosystems are changing in response to
sea level rise and the actions of people. Like many coastal ecosystems, the Florida
Everglades are threatened by the diversion of freshwater to support urban and
agricultural expansion. At the same time, sea level rise has caused coastal ecosystems
to become saltier, threatening the freshwater supply, stressing freshwater plants, and
causing the soils to collapse. When the soils beneath coastal wetlands disappear,
seawater invades even more quickly. Researchers in the FCE LTER are continuing long-term
studies and experiments to understand how these changes influence ecosystem functions
and services. They are also developing tools for resource managers to create an
effective freshwater restoration program. The science team includes an active community
of graduate students. As a group, they reach the public through education and outreach
activities, and regularly advise policy-makers on resource management decisions. The FCE
LTER research program addresses how changing fresh and marine supplies of water
influence coastal ecosystem dynamics through: (i) continued long-term assessment of
changes in biogeochemistry, primary production, organic matter, and trophic dynamics in
ecosystems along freshwater-to-marine gradients, (ii) maintenance of existing in situ
and ex situ long-term experiments, (iii) use of high-resolution remote sensing, coupled
with models to forecast landscape-scale changes, (iv) addition of synoptic satellite
sites to capture discrete spatio-temporal responses to episodic disturbance, and (v)
initiation of new experimental manipulations to determine drivers and mechanisms of
resilience to saltwater intrusion. Data syntheses integrate month-to-annual and
inter-annual data into models of water, nutrients, carbon, and species dynamics
throughout the Everglades landscape to compare how ecosystems with different
productivities and carbon stores respond (maintain, increase, or decline) to short-
(pulses) and long-term changes (presses) in hydrologic connectivity. Understanding and
predicting the drivers of abrupt changes in ecosystems is a key challenge in ecosystem
ecology.
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