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String lilies are common in Florida's wetlands. |
Several kayaking field trips are offered as part of the program for the FNPS conference in May in Jacksonville. This one, about the Kayak Amelia Island, could apply to most of the others. Space is limited for the field trips so register sooner, rather than later, to reserve your spot.
By Kat McConnel
Northeast Florida has its share of valuable and beautiful tidal
marshes; there are numerous meadows of brackish and freshwater marsh
vegetation. As marshes are best
observed from the water, paddling provides the best opportunity to access this
overlooked aquatic natural community.
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Spartina grasses intercept the waves at the shoreline. |
Between high and low marsh, inches, not
feet, cause a dramatic difference in vegetation community composition. Low salt
marshes are regularly flooded on each high tide
typically dominated by salt marsh cordgrass, (
Spartina alterniflora). Other
salt marsh plant species, such as needlerush (
Juncus romerianus) cannot
tolerate as wet a habitat, so they grow in slightly higher elevations along the
fringe of waterways. Although salt marsh cordgrass is the
dominant species found in low tidal saltwater marshes, other species share this
habitat. Within slight depressions, a perennial herb called sea lavender, or marsh rosemary (
Limonium carolinianum), grows along the upper edges of low
marshes. It is a small to medium-size plant that grows up to 3-ft and is
characterized by a basal rosette of leathery, fleshy leaves between 2 to 10
inches long. The tiny (1/8 inch wide) bluish flowers bloom from midsummer
through early autumn. Dense populations of blooming sea lavender plants produce
a hazy, almost ethereal mist of lavender. Saltmarsh morning glory (
Ipomoea sagittata) is a low-growing
twining vine confined to maritime marshes and interdunal swales. The leaves are
alternate, 1 ¼ -in to 4 in long, narrowly 3-lobed, and well-spaced along the stem. The
funnel-shaped flowers are 2 ½ -in to 4 in long and pink to rose-purple with a
darkened center and flaring apex.
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An egret behind a fringe of rushes. |
Tidal freshwater marshes grow inland from
the sea and up coastal streams, including Simpson Creek, where the waters grade
from slightly brackish to mostly fresh. As salinity decreases, plant and animal
diversity increases; many more species of plants and
animals are found in tidal freshwater marshes than in saltwater marshes. Upper
reaches of tidal influenced rivers are lined with narrow fringes of marsh
containing many plant species. Color abounds with the blooms of blue flag iris (
Iris
virginica) growing in the shallows along the shore. Spatterdocks (
Nuphar
lutea) bear bright yellow globular flowers on large green leaves that float
on the surface of the water. The white, fragrant water-lily,
Nymphea
odorata, also with large floating rounded leaves, is a plant of
slow-flowing tidal freshwater ponds and shallow lakes. Golden nutlets of sedges
(
Cyperus spp) and the brown, sausage-like heads of cattails
(Typha
spp) contrast with the dazzling white of swamp lily (
Crinum americanum)
and bull-tongue (
Sagittaria lanceolata) along with the vibrant purple of pickerelweed (
Pontederia cordata).
With such a high quality of habitat comes
a rich diversity of animals: small fishes come into the marsh streams on a
flood tide, hiding and feeding on insects and other small invertebrates in the
vegetation along the edges. Marsh rabbits feed on the rushes and, in turn,
become food for raptors, alligators and snakes. Great blue herons, roseate
spoonbills, various egrets, and ibis regularly comb the grasses and rushes.
Tidal estuaries provide abundant opportunity to observe wildlife within a
diverse plant community.
If you'd like to register for the conference and for one of our kayaking field trips got to
www.fnps.org/conference. Thanks.
Thanks Kat for this highlight of the NE Florida waterways.
Posted by and photos by Ginny Stibolt.
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