Mangrove Soil Chemistry Shark River Slough and Taylor Slough, Everglades National Park (FCE), from December 2000 to May 23, 2002
At a Glance
Authors: Edward Castaneda, Victor Rivera-Monroy, Robert Twilley
Time period: to
Package id: knb-lter-fce.1117.4
Dataset id: LT_SS_Rivera_001
Castaneda, E., V. Rivera-Monroy, R. Twilley. 2005. Mangrove Soil Chemistry Shark River Slough and Taylor Slough, Everglades National Park (FCE), from December 2000 to May 23, 2002. Environmental Data Initiative. https://doi.org/. Dataset accessed 2024-11-21.
Geographic Coverage
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Dataset Creator(s)
- Name: Dr. Edward Castaneda
- Position: LTER Postdoctoral Researcher
- Address: Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences
Louisiana State University
3201 Energy, Coast, and Environment Building
Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA - Phone: (225) 578-6422
- Fax: (225) 578-6423
- Email: ecasta1@tigers.lsu.edu
- URL: http://www.oceanography.lsu.edu/
- Name: Dr. Victor Rivera-Monroy
- Position: LTER Project Collaborator
- Organization: Wetland Biogeochemistry Institute
- Address: Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences
Louisiana State University
3209 Energy, Coast, and Environment Building
Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA - Phone: (225) 578-2773
- Fax: (225) 578-6423
- Email: vhrivera@lsu.edu
- URL: http://www.gulfbase.org/
- Name: Dr. Robert Twilley
- Position: LTER Project Collaborator
- Organization: Louisiana Sea Grant Program
- Address: 239 Sea Grant Building
Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA - Phone: (225) 578-6445
- Fax: (225) 578-6331
- Email: rtwilley@lsu.edu
- URL: http://www.gulfbase.org/
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Dataset AbstractPhysicochemical variables in soils from stations SRS-4-6 and TS/Ph6-8 were sampled in the period December 2000-May 2002. Salinity, temperature, pH, Redox, and sulfide concentrations were measured in 4 stations (sampling units) located in adjacent 10 x 10 m plots (in a 20 x 20 m block). Statistical analyses are in progress.
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Geographic CoverageStudy Extent Description
The Study Extent of this dataset includes the FCE Shark River Slough and Taylor Slough research sites within Everglades National Park, South Florida
Bounding Coordinates
Data were collected in the Shark River Slough and Taylor Slough, within Everglades National Park, South Florida
N: 25.410, S: 25.197, E: -80.525, W: -81.078
Florida Coastal Everglades LTER Study Area: South Florida, Everglades National Park, and Florida Bay
N: 25.761, S: 24.913, E: -80.490, W: -81.078
FCE LTER Sites
SRS4,SRS5,SRS6,TS/Ph6b, TS/Ph7b, TS/Ph8
Geographic DescriptionBounding CoordinatesFCE LTER Site SRS4N: 25.410, S: 25.410, E: -80.964, W: -80.964FCE LTER Site SRS5N: 25.377, S: 25.377, E: -81.032, W: -81.032FCE LTER Site SRS6N: 25.365, S: 25.365, E: -81.078, W: -81.078FCE LTER Site TS/Ph6bN: 25.216, S: 25.216, E: -80.651, W: -80.651FCE LTER Site TS/Ph7bN: 25.197, S: 25.197, E: -80.642, W: -80.642FCE LTER Site TS/Ph8N: 25.233, S: 25.233, E: -80.525, W: -80.525
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Temporal CoverageStart Date: 2000-12-15
End Date: 2002-05-23
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Attributes
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Data Table: Mangrove Soil Chemistry Shark River Slough and Taylor Slough, Everglades National ParkAttribute Name:SITENAMEAttribute Label:sitenameAttribute Definition:Name of LTER siteStorage Type:textMeasurement Scale:Name of LTER siteMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:DateAttribute Label:dateAttribute Definition:Collection dateStorage Type:datetimeMeasurement Scale:Missing Value Code:Attribute Name:Plot_IDAttribute Label:ID numberAttribute Definition:Plot ID NumberStorage Type:ordinalMeasurement Scale:Plot ID NumberMissing Value Code:-9999 (Value will never be recorded )Attribute Name:Subplot_IDAttribute Label:ID numberAttribute Definition:Subplot ID NumberStorage Type:ordinalMeasurement Scale:Subplot ID NumberMissing Value Code:-9999 (Value will never be recorded )Attribute Name:DepthAttribute Label:depthAttribute Definition:Soil Sampling DepthStorage Type:dataMeasurement Scale:Units: centimeterPrecision: 1
Number Type: realMissing Value Code:-9999 (Value will never be recorded )Attribute Name:ReplicaAttribute Label:ID numberAttribute Definition:Sample Replica IDStorage Type:textMeasurement Scale:Sample Replica IDMissing Value Code:-9999 (Value will never be recorded )Attribute Name:Soil_SalinityAttribute Label:salinityAttribute Definition:Porewater SalinityStorage Type:dataMeasurement Scale:Units: PSUPrecision: 0.01
Number Type: realMissing Value Code:-9999.00 (Value will never be recorded )Attribute Name:Soil_TemperatureAttribute Label:temperatureAttribute Definition:Porewater TemperatureStorage Type:dataMeasurement Scale:Units: celsiusPrecision: 0.01
Number Type: realMissing Value Code:-9999.00 (Value will never be recorded )Attribute Name:Soil_pHAttribute Label:pHAttribute Definition:Soil pHStorage Type:dataMeasurement Scale:Units: dimensionlessPrecision: 0.01
Number Type: realMissing Value Code:-9999.00 (Value will never be recorded )Attribute Name:Soil_Redox_CorrectedAttribute Label:EhAttribute Definition:Soil Redox CorrectedStorage Type:dataMeasurement Scale:Units: millivoltPrecision: 0.01
Number Type: realMissing Value Code:-9999.00 (Value will never be recorded )Attribute Name:Soil_SulfideAttribute Label:concentrationAttribute Definition:Porewater Hydrogen SulfideStorage Type:dataMeasurement Scale:Units: millimolesPerLiterPrecision: 0.01
Number Type: realMissing Value Code:-9999.00 (Value will never be recorded )
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Data Table: Mangrove Soil Chemistry Shark River Slough and Taylor Slough, Everglades National Park
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MethodsSampling Description
The properties of mangrove communities vary within an environmental setting on the location of mangroves along the salinity gradient of an estuary and with distance inland from shore along the intertidal zone. Intertidal soils can be quite heterogeneous because many edaphic characteristics depend on the depositional and erosional patterns and on the influence of plant communities, which add organic matter, cycle nutrients, and modify soil salinity and redox conditions. Inputs from terrestrial runoff generally are considered the major nutrient source that supports mangrove forest development. As a result patches and zones of forest composition result from complex gradients of hydroperiod and soil condition, such as nutrient limitation (e.g., nitrogen and phosphorous and abiotic stressors (salinity and sulfide). We are testing the general hypothesis that reduction in forest structure along the estuarine gradients are associated with soil variation in soil fertility and stressors along major sources of freshwater in Shark River and Taylor Slough.
Method Step
Description
Pore water samples are colllected from stations at different depths using a plastic siphon and syringe (McKee et al 1988). One aliquot of pore water is assayed for salinity using a LavComp Instrument SCT analyzer and a pH using a HANNA H19025 pH meter. A second aliquot of sample is filtered to reduce error associated with suspended sediments; the first 10 ml of each sample is discarded to avoid oxidation. The next 5 ml of sample was immediately added to an equal volume of antioxidant buffer and brought to the labaoratory where it is analyzed for sulfide concentrations with a LAZAR Model IS-156 sulfide sensing electrode (McKee et al. 1988). McKee, K. LMendelsshon, I. A, Hester, M. W (1988). Reexamination of pore water sulfide concentrations and redox potentials near the aerial roots of Rhizophora mangle and Avicennia germinnans. American Journal of Botany 75: 1352-1359
Instrumentation
LavComp Instrument SCT analyzer HANNA H19025 pH meterQuality Control
Dataset is inspected by PI for QA/QC; descriptive statistics, normal distribution plots, standard validation checks for negative numbers, graphs to detect potential outliers
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Distribution and Intellectual RightsOnline distribution
http://fcelter.fiu.edu/perl/public_data_download.pl?datasetid=LT_SS_Rivera_001.txt
Data Submission Date: 2002-08-16
Intellectual Rights
These data are classified as 'Type II' whereby original FCE LTER experimental data collected by individual FCE researchers to be released to restricted audiences according to terms specified by the owners of the data. Type II data are considered to be exceptional and should be rare in occurrence. The justification for exceptions must be well documented and approved by the lead PI and Site Data Manager. Some examples of Type II data restrictions may include: locations of rare or endangered species, data that are covered under prior licensing or copyright (e.g., SPOT satellite data), or covered by the Human Subjects Act, Student Dissertation data and those data related to the FCE LTER Program but not funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) under LTER grant #DEB-9910514. Researchers that make use of Type II Data may be subject to additional restrictions to protect any applicable commercial or confidentiality interests. All publications based on this dataset must cite the data Contributor, the Florida Coastal Everglades Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) Program and that this material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation through the Florida Coastal Everglades Long-Term Ecological Research program under Cooperative Agreements #DEB-1237517, #DBI-0620409, and #DEB-9910514. Additionally, two copies of the manuscript must be submitted to the Florida Coastal Everglades LTER Program Office, LTER Program Manager, Florida International University, Southeast Environmental Research Center, OE 148, University Park, Miami, Florida 33199. For a complete description of the FCE LTER Data Access Policy and Data User Agreement, please go to FCE Data Management Policy at http://fcelter.fiu.edu/data/DataMgmt.pdf and LTER Network Data Access Policy at http://fcelter.fiu.edu/data/core/data_user_agreement/distribution_policy.html.
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KeywordsFCE, Florida Coastal Everglades LTER, ecological research, long-term monitoring, Taylor Slough, Shark River Slough, soils, mangroves, wetlands, salinity, nutrients, biogeochemistry, water
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Dataset Contact
- Position: Information Manager
- Organization: LTER Network Office
- Address: UNM Biology Department, MSC03-2020
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001 USA - Phone: 505 277-2535
- Fax: 505 277-2541
- Email: tech-support@lternet.edu
- URL: http://www.lternet.edu
- Name: Victor Rivera-Monroy
- Position: LTER Project Collaborator
- Organization: Wetland Biogeochemistry Institute
- Address: Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences
Louisiana State University
3209 Energy, Coast, and Environment Building
Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA - Phone: (225) 578-2773
- Fax: (225) 578-6423
- Email: vhrivera@lsu.edu
- URL: http://www.gulfbase.org/
- Position: Information Manager
- Organization: Florida Coastal Everglades LTER Program
- Address: Florida International University
University Park
OE 148
Miami, FL 33199 USA - Phone: 305-348-6054
- Fax: 305-348-4096
- Email: fcelter@fiu.edu
- URL: http://fcelter.fiu.edu
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Data Table and FormatData Table: Mangrove Soil Chemistry Shark River Slough and Taylor Slough, Everglades National ParkEntity Name:LT_SS_Rivera_001Entity Description:Mangrove Soil Chemistry Shark River Slough and Taylor Slough, Everglades National ParkObject Name:LT_SS_Rivera_001Number of Header Lines:1Attribute Orientation:columnField Delimiter:,Number of Records:1608
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Metadata Provider
- Organization: Florida Coastal Everglades LTER Program
- Address: Florida International University
University Park
OE 148
Miami, FL 33199 USA - Phone: 305-348-6054
- Email: fcelter@fiu.edu
- URL: http://fcelter.fiu.edu