Abstract

Coastal plant communities are being transformed or lost because of sea level rise (SLR) and land-use change. In conjunction with SLR, the Florida Everglades ecosystem has undergone large-scale drainage and restoration, altering coastal vegetation throughout south Florida. To understand how coastal plant communities are changing over time, accurate mapping techniques are needed that can define plant communities at a fine-enough resolution to detect fine-scale changes. We explored using bi-seasonal versus single-season WorldView-2 satellite data to map three mangrove and four adjacent plant communities, including the buttonwood/glycophyte community that harbors the federally-endangered plant Chromolaena frustrata. Bi-seasonal data were more effective than single-season to differentiate all communities of interest. Bi-seasonal data combined with Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) elevation data were used to map coastal plant communities of a coastal stretch within Everglades National Park (ENP). Overall map accuracy was 86%. Black and red mangroves were the dominant communities and covered 50% of the study site. All the remaining communities had ≤10% cover, including the buttonwood/glycophyte community. ENP harbors 21 rare coastal species threatened by SLR. The spatially explicit, quantitative data provided by our map provides a fine-scale baseline for monitoring future change in these species’ habitats. Our results also offer a method to monitor vegetation change in other threatened habitats.

Highlights

  • Coastal plant communities around the world are being altered or completely lost by sea level rise (SLR) and land-use change [1,2,3]

  • A reduction of freshwater flow and increasing rates of SLR have substantially increased the rate of change found along Florida’s coast [7,19,27,28,30,53,54,55,56,57]

  • Ross et al [28] found that between 1952 and 2000, graminoid marshes in the eastern portion of the southern Everglades transitioned into mangrove scrub

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Summary

Introduction

Coastal plant communities around the world are being altered or completely lost by sea level rise (SLR) and land-use change [1,2,3]. The global extent of mangroves and associated coastal wetland communities, which are important wildlife and rare species habitats, has shrunken as a result of climate change and anthropogenic disturbance [1,4,5,6], threatening species of concern [4,7]. A number of researchers have had success accurately classifying wetland and mangrove communities using a combination of data sources [4,6,8,9,10,11]. Multi-temporal satellite imagery has been shown to accurately classify wetland plant communities over distinct phenological time periods [13,14,15]

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