Elements of a Comprehensive Dune Management Plan

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Presented at the South Florida Native Plant Seminar October 18-19, 2023 Naples Botanical Garden


Thank you to our sponsors


1. LIGHTING CONTROL


pretty good.. Delray Public Beach


not so much


definitely not good


work in progress



ELEMENTS OF A COMPREHENSIVE DUNE MANAGEMENT PLAN

2. EXOTIC SPECIES REMOVAL AND CONTROL


HAWAIIAN SEAGRAPE, Scaevola taccada. A large sprawling competitive shrub. Recruits aggressively from white seeds. Florida Exotic Pest Plant Council Category I invasive exotic. Specimen at B-123

From Delray Public Beach, prior to eradication


BRAZILIAN PEPPER, Shinus terebinthifolia, a sprawling shrub and heavy seeder, infests coastal and inland areas. Specimen across from the Marriot main entrance. FLEPPC Category 1 invasive exotic species.


ARABIAN LILAC, Vitex trifolia . A large upright shrub, escaped from cultivation, overshadows and crowds native grasses and strand species. Specimen at PARKING meter B-118. FLEPPC CATEGORY II.


LATHER LEAF, Colubrina Asiataica. A profuse seeder, like most of the other invasives, overshadows and displaces natives with typically single plant masses. Specimen at meter B-119. FLEPPC Category I.


GREY NICKERBEAN, Ceasalpinia bonduc, is a thorny overshadowing native vine, which forms dense invasive mats and kills large areas of beneficial plants below. Specimen at parking meter B-180.


St. Augustine grass, Stenotaphrum secundatum, is a common turfgrass escaped from cultivation, which invades dunes and competes with native pioneer zone species. Large area at parking meter B-85 –B-90.


SNAKE PLANT, MOTHER IN LAWS TONGUE, Sanseveria species. An escaped landscape plant that is difficult to eradicate once established since root fragments regrow. FLEPPC Category II. Meter B-160

• All these plant species are to be removed from the dune, by hand or mechanical means and stopped from regrowth by a program of regular inspection and seedling control, as a condition of FDEP dune pruning permits.


COIN VINE, Dalberghia ecastophylum. A native but invasive overshadowing vine, with floating seeds. Kills large areas below within a few years of establishment. Specimen and large mass at meter B-168

Native dune species can be invasive too.


Dalberghia ecastophylum, coinvine” ..single 3 year old plant with 36 leads to 30 feet long



3 plants, 3 years, 500 square yards, $4K repair



ELEMENTS OF A COMPREHENSIVE DUNE MAINTENANCE PLAN

3. FOREDUNE HUSBANDRY (sea oat zone)


PIONEER ZONE: grasses and vines

STRAND ZONE (Scrub): palmettos, and shrubby species



Deep roots resist wave scour during storms.







75 foot seaward expansion, 5 vertical feet sand capture


Often done incorrectly with wrong plants, wrong place.


ELEMENTS OF A COMPREHENSIVE DUNE MAINTENANCE PLAN

4. STRAND ZONE PRUNING (shrub zone)


Original 1981 seagrape plantings were about the footprint of a Honda Civic


Fifteen year growth and expansion demanded major crown reduction


Section 17 Seagrape expansion since 1985 Red line is approximate footprint of seagrape clusters as installed to trap sand at access points 1982; about 300 sq ft. Yellow is footprint at time of 2001 FDEP pruning permit; about 4,500 sq.ft. White line is seagrape footprint at 2015 FDEP exotic removal permit; about 10,500 sq. ft.

➤ 80 ft

N

35X increase since planting, 2.3X increase since pruning began. 7% /year, expansion since pruning began.


Without management, entire beach area would be monoculture in 10 years.


Pruning reduces vagrancy and crime



ELEMENTS OF A COMPREHENSIVE DUNE MAINTENANCE PLAN

5. STRAND ENHANCEMENT (shrub zone landscaping)


model after nature


Bay Cedar, Suriana maritima


The dominant plant in the natural ecosystem was saw palmetto..very deep roots


Design can be wild-ish..


or more formal..


Wilma’s 100 mph+ winds destroyed palms but had no impact on native dune installation.





Blanket Flower, Gallardia pulchella


Blue curls


Beach clustervine


Sea Lavendar, Argusia gnaphalodes


BEACH RAGWEED, Ambrosia hispida


ELEMENTS OF A COMPREHENSIVE DUNE MAINTENANCE PLAN

NOT !!

a few examples of waste and errors..


Grassy foredune is essential to health of backdune palmettos

$250K wasted


Foredune plant species die off quickly when cut off from open beach habitat.


drip irrigation is inefficient in course, sandy soil.. does not promote foot foraging. Shallow planting allows roots to dry out daily, reduces vitality


THESE PLANTS ARE NOT IDENTIFIABLE AS NATIVE DUNE SPECIES


WHICH IS MORE IMPORTANT?

WHY?


Thanks for listening.

Please practice redundant contraception

Rob Barron 561-441-1446


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