Diatom composition and environmental data from the Greater Everglades, Florida, USA (2013-2020)
At a Glance
Authors: Kelsey Solomon, R. Stevenson, Donatto Surratt, Kevin Whelan, Franco Tobias, Katherine Johnson, Evelyn Gaiser
Time period: 2013-01-01 to 2020-12-31
Package id: knb-lter-fce.1276.2
Solomon, K., R. Stevenson, D. Surratt, K. Whelan, F. Tobias, K. Johnson, E. Gaiser. 2025. Diatom composition and environmental data from the Greater Everglades, Florida, USA (2013-2020). Environmental Data Initiative. https://doi.org/10.6073/pasta/3ed2c57c99b5b866a9ba2090f0d55aa4. Dataset accessed 2025-02-23.
Geographic Coverage
This data set contains the following files.
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FCE_1276_Solomon_Comparison_Data
CSV file containing diatom composition data and associated environmental data.
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FCE_1276_Solomon_Comparison_GPS
CSV data file containing GPS locations for each site that was sampled
Attribute table details Download
FCE_1276_Solomon_Comparison_Code
R code used for methods and figures in the related manuscript "Mitigating bias in species optima estimates arising from non-uniform environmental gradients" (Solomon et al.)
Attribute table details Download
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Dataset Creator(s)
- Name: Kelsey Solomon
- Organization: Florida International University
- Email: ksolomon@fiu.edu
- Name: R. Stevenson
- Organization: Michigan State University
- Email: rjstev@msu.edu
- Name: Donatto Surratt
- Organization: National Park Service
- Email: donatto_surratt@nps.gov
- Name: Kevin Whelan
- Organization: South Florida / Caribbean Inventory and Monitoring Network
- Email: kevin_r_whelan@nps.gov
- Name: Franco Tobias
- Organization: Florida International University
- Email: tobiasf@fiu.edu
- Name: Katherine Johnson
- Organization: Florida International University
- Email: kajohnso@fiu.edu
- Name: Evelyn Gaiser
- Organization: Florida International University
- Email: gaisere@fiu.edu
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Dataset AbstractEnvironmental and diatom data were collected from sites in the Big Cypress National Preserve (BICY) by the South Florida/Caribbean Inventory and Monitoring Network of the National Park Service and from sites in the Everglades Protection Area (EPA) as part of the Monitoring and Assessment Program of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan. Samples from years 2012, 2013, 2019, 2019, and 2020 are included in this dataset. Environmental data include drier variables that have been found to influence diatom assemblage composition in the greater Everglades ecosystem, including periphyton mat total phosphorus (a proxy for phosphorus in the environment), water column pH, water column conductivity, water depth, days since last dry, and hydroperiod. Diatom data include diatom species composition as percent relative abundances. Code included is pertinent to the methods described in "Robust species optima estimates from non-uniformly sampled environmental gradients" by Solomon et al. 2025, Journal of Paleolimnology.
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Geographic CoverageBounding Coordinates
This study took place in the Greater Everglades ecosystem of South Florida, USA within the Big Cypress National Preserve and Everglades Protection Areas.
N: 26.3875456, S: 25.2787254, E: -80.307383, W: -81.339244
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Temporal CoverageStart Date: 2013
End Date: 2020
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Attributes
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Data Table: CSV file containing diatom composition data and associated environmental data.Attribute Name:TAG_IDAttribute Label:TAG_IDAttribute Definition:Sample tag IDStorage Type:stringMeasurement Scale:textMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:BC_HARMONIZEDNAMEAttribute Label:BC_HARMONIZEDNAMEAttribute Definition:Harmonized taxon nameStorage Type:stringMeasurement Scale:textMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:SPPCODEBCAttribute Label:SPPCODEBCAttribute Definition:Diatom nine character taxon codeStorage Type:stringMeasurement Scale:textMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:RELATIVE_PCT_ABUNDAttribute Label:RELATIVE_PCT_ABUNDAttribute Definition:Relative percent abundance of the diatom taxon within the sampleStorage Type:floatMeasurement Scale:Units: percentNumber Type: realMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:SURFACE_WATER_PHAttribute Label:SURFACE_WATER_PHAttribute Definition:pH of water sampleStorage Type:floatMeasurement Scale:Units: dimensionlessNumber Type: realMissing Value Code:-9999 (pH meter not working)Attribute Name:PERI_TPAttribute Label:PERI_TPAttribute Definition:Concentration of total phosphorus per dried gram of periphyton; unit = µg/g mat dry massStorage Type:floatMeasurement Scale:Units: microgramPerGramPrecision: 0.01
Number Type: realMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:SURFACE_WATER_CONDAttribute Label:SURFACE_WATER_CONDAttribute Definition:Conductivity of water sample; unit = µS cm-1Storage Type:floatMeasurement Scale:Units: microsiemensPerCentimeterPrecision: 1
Number Type: realMissing Value Code:-9999 (conductivity meter not working)Attribute Name:DEPTHAttribute Label:DEPTHAttribute Definition:Average water depth of 3 measurements representative of replicate; unit = cmStorage Type:floatMeasurement Scale:Units: centimeterPrecision: 0.1
Number Type: realMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:DSLDDAttribute Label:DSLDDAttribute Definition:Days since last dry down <=5cm; unit = daysStorage Type:integerMeasurement Scale:Units: nominalDayPrecision: 1
Number Type: integerMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:HYDROPERIOD_MEANAttribute Label:HYDROPERIOD_MEANAttribute Definition:Mean hydroperiod length for each site across the entire time series of that site (i.e., mean annual hydroperiod value from 1991 through the year that the site was last sampled); unit = daysStorage Type:floatMeasurement Scale:Units: nominalDayPrecision: 0.1
Number Type: realMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:PROJECTAttribute Label:PROJECTAttribute Definition:BICY (Big Cypress National Preserve) or EVER (Everglades Protection Area) datasetStorage Type:stringMeasurement Scale:BICY= Big Cypress National Preserve
EVER= Eveglades Protection Area
Missing Value Code:Attribute Name:MANUSCRIPT_TAXON_NAMEAttribute Label:MANUSCRIPT_TAXON_NAMEAttribute Definition:Harmonized taxon name used in the associated manuscript which reflects the most current taxonomic nomenclatureStorage Type:stringMeasurement Scale:textMissing Value Code:
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Data Table: CSV data file containing GPS locations for each site that was sampledAttribute Name:SITE_IDAttribute Label:SITE_IDAttribute Definition:Site IDStorage Type:stringMeasurement Scale:textMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:EASTING_UTMAttribute Label:EASTING_UTMAttribute Definition:Latitude coordinates of site in UTMStorage Type:floatMeasurement Scale:Units: meterNumber Type: realMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:NORTHING_UTMAttribute Label:NORTHING_UTMAttribute Definition:Longitude coordinates of site in UTMStorage Type:floatMeasurement Scale:Units: meterNumber Type: realMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:PROJECTAttribute Label:PROJECTAttribute Definition:BICY (Big Cypress National Preserve) or EVER (Everglades Protection Area) datasetStorage Type:stringMeasurement Scale:BICY= Big Cypress National Preserve
EVER= Everglades Protection Area
Missing Value Code:Attribute Name:ZONE_UTMAttribute Label:ZONE_UTMAttribute Definition:UTM ZoneStorage Type:stringMeasurement Scale:17N= 17 North
Missing Value Code:Attribute Name:LONGITUDEAttribute Label:LONGITUDEAttribute Definition:Longitude coordinates of site in decimal degrees (WGS84)Storage Type:floatMeasurement Scale:Units: degreeNumber Type: realMissing Value Code:Attribute Name:LATITUDEAttribute Label:LATITUDEAttribute Definition:Latitude coordinates of site in decimal degrees (WGS84)Storage Type:floatMeasurement Scale:Units: degreeNumber Type: realMissing Value Code:
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Data Table: CSV file containing diatom composition data and associated environmental data.
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MethodsMethod Step
Description
The EPA periphyton samples were collected annually as part of the Monitoring and Assessment Program of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP 2020). Generalized random-tessellation stratification (Stevens and Olsen 2004) was used to determine the location of three unique, sampleable Primary Sampling Units (PSUs) each year within 800 × 800 m grid cells (Philippi 2005). To be considered sampleable habitat, the PSUs had to contain vegetation that was not too dense for the sample device to enclose one-m3 of the water column and less than one m deep, which were primarily wet prairies and sloughs. Samples were collected from each PSU during a four-month window (September–December) representing the peak wet season in the EPA. At each PSU, a one-m3 enclosure with mesh sides that was open on the top and bottom was used to collect samples. All periphyton within the enclosure was collected and measured for biovolume using a graduated cylinder. If no calcareous benthic, epiphytic, or metaphytic periphyton was present, flocculent detritus or filamentous green algae were collected. A 120 mL homogenized subsample of the periphyton was returned to the lab on ice, frozen, and then thawed before processing.
The BICY periphyton samples were collected annually by the South Florida/Caribbean Inventory and Monitoring Network (SFCN) of the National Park Service in wetlands in the northwest corner of the Preserve because surface water monitoring in that area indicated high concentrations of P (Urgelles et al. 2019). The monitoring area was delineated into seven hydrologically distinct basins separated by natural and artificial barriers. Some of these basins had anthropogenically elevated surface water P concentrations, while other basins had ambient surface water P concentrations. A restricted stratified sampling design was used to establish six to seven permanent, random sampling sites per basin, targeting freshwater broadleaf marsh habitat. To be considered sampleable habitat, site selection was constrained by the following criteria: the site must be located within 250 m of freshwater broadleaf marsh habitat, at least 1000 m from other sites within the same basin, located greater than 100 m from road or trail; the site must be accessible by road or helicopter and without obvious human disturbance or vegetation that is too dense to sample. Samples were collected from each site during October–March. For samples collected between hydrologic years 2013 and 2019, the preferred substrate collection order for calcareous periphyton was (1) floating mat, (2) epiphytic, (3) benthic, and (4) epidendric. At each site, a minimum of five grab samples of periphyton were collected within a 5 m radius and composited into two 120-mL homogenized samples. For samples collected in the hydrologic year 2020, the periphyton samples did not have a preferred substrate collection order, but instead were collected in relative proportion of the substrates represented at the site. Each sample collected was divided into two 125-mL Nalgene (Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., Waltham, Massachusetts) bottles on ice and returned to the lab. For each sample, a subsample (one 125-mL Nalgene bottle) was preserved in a 3% formalin solution for diatom assemblage analysis and the other subsample (one 125-mL Nalgene bottle) was frozen and thawed before further processing.
Water depth was measured at each site using a one-m measuring stick (cm), and surface water conductivity (µS cm-1), temperature (°C), and pH were measured using a multimeter probe. Days since the last dry down (number of days since flooding of the marsh surface after the latest drying even when water levels were <5 cm) and hydroperiod (days flooded) of the sample sites were estimated by calibration measured water depths to nearby continuous water level gauges using digital elevation models provided by the Everglades Depth Estimation Network (“EDEN”; https://sofia.usgs.gov/eden/stationlist.php).
Sample processing
In the lab, animals, plant matter, and other debris were removed from the periphyton, and subsamples were taken for the measurement of dry mass, periphyton mat total P (TP) concentrations, and diatom taxonomic composition analysis. To obtain periphyton dry mass (g), the biomass subsample was dried at 80°C for >48 h and then weighed. To obtain mat TP, the TP subsample was dried at 80°C, pulverized with a mortar and pestle, and then processed using colorimetric analysis to estimate TP concentration expressed as µg/g mat dry mass (Solórzano and Sharp 1980). We used mat TP as a proxy for TP in the environment because mat TP has been shown to have a stronger correlation with P loading than traditional water column P measurements (Gaiser et al. 2004). Excess P delivered to the ultraoligotrophic Everglades is rapidly assimilated by periphyton and vegetation, making TP almost undetectable in the water column even when the system has been exposed to enriched inputs for years (Gaiser et al. 2004; Gaiser 2009).
Diatom samples were cleaned of mineral debris and calcite organic matter using sulfuric acid oxidation methods following Hasle and Fryxell (1970) and a known volume was then permanently affixed to a glass slide using Naphrax (PhycoTech Inc., St. Joseph, Michigan) mounting medium. A minimum of 500 valves was counted and identified per slide (Weber 1980) using a compound light microscope at 1000× magnification under oil immersion. Identifications were made to the lowest taxonomic level possible using Diatoms of North America (diatoms.org), a database of South Florida diatom taxa (https://fce-lter.fiu.edu/data/database/diatom/), and other regional references (Slate and Stevenson 2007; Lee et al. 2014). Raw diatom counts were converted to relative abundance through standardizing by the number of valves counted for each taxon by the total number of valves counted.
Taxonomic harmonization
While a consistent photo-documented voucher flora was generated for both the BICY and EPA datasets to guide taxonomic decisions, different taxonomic sources and conventions were used for the two wetlands, requiring a taxonomic harmonization step prior to analysis. Frequent discussions between taxonomists responsible for the BICY and EPA floras enabled the harmonization of distinct morphological taxonomic units (MOTUs) for the most common taxa, and a taxonomic assignment for these MOTUs was agreed upon. When agreement on a taxonomic assignment for a MOTU could not be achieved, taxa were lumped into a new composite MOTU (Table S1). Instead of dropping difficult taxa from an analysis, inclusion through lumping can improve transfer functions involving multiple analysts, provided that the lumping decision is consistent throughout the combined datasets (Lee et al. 2019). Harmonization resulted in consistent assignments of 97.2% and 98.8% of diatom MOTUs in the BICY and EPA datasets, respectively, and the remaining non-harmonized taxa and those not identified to the species level or below were removed from the analysis. Since the presence of rare species in data sets can create noise and reduce the clarity of underlying patterns, and because we were interested in comparing the mat TP optima of taxa that were present in both wetlands, we removed taxa occurring in < 1% of the samples in each of the regional datasets (BICY and EPA) and taxa with a mean relative abundance of < 0.5% in each of the regional datasets. When harmonization and screening were complete, we merged the two taxonomic and environmental datasets into a common combined dataset.
References:
CERP (Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan) (2020) 2020 CERP Report to Congress. Department of the Army, Washington DC
Gaiser EE, Scinto LJ, Richards JH, Jayachandran K, Childers DL, Trexler JC, Jones RD (2004) Phosphorus in periphyton mats provides the best metric for detecting low-level P enrichment in an oligotrophic wetland. Wat Res 38:507–516
Gaiser EE (2009) Periphyton as an indicator of restoration in the Florida Everglades. Ecol Indic 9:S37–S45
Hasle GR, Fryxell GA (1970) Diatoms: Cleaning and Mounting for Light and Electron Microscopy. T Am Microsc Soc 89:469–474
Philippi T (2005) Adaptive Cluster Sampling for Estimation of Abundances Within Local Populations of Low-Abundance Plants. Ecol 86:1091–1100
Lee SS, Gaiser EE, Van De Vijver B, Edlund MB, Spaulding SA (2014) Morphology and typification of Mastogloia smithii and M. lacustris, with descriptions of two new species from the Florida Everglades and the Caribbean region. Diatom Res 29:325–350
Lee SS, Bishop IW, Spaulding SA, Mitchell RM, Yuan LL (2019) Taxonomic harmonization may reveal a stronger association between diatom assemblages and total phosphorus in large datasets. Ecol Indic 102:166–174
Slate JE, Stevenson RJ (2007) The diatom flora of phosphorus-enriched and unenriched sites in an Everglades marsh. Diatom Res 22:355–386
Solórzano L, Sharp JH (1980) Determination of total dissolved phosphorus and particulate phosphorus in natural waters. Limnol Oceanogr 25:754–758
Stevens DL, Olsen AR (2004) Spatially Balanced Sampling of Natural Resources. J Am Stat Assoc 99:262–278
Urgelles R, Whelan RT, Muxo R, Shamblin RB, Patterson JM (2019) Periphyton Monitoring in Big Cypress National Preserve: Protocol Narrative. Natural Resource Report, National Park Service.
Weber CI (1980) Biological Field and Laboratory Methods for Measuring the Quality of Surface Waters and Effluents. US Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati
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Distribution and Intellectual RightsOnline distribution
https://pasta.lternet.edu/package/data/eml/knb-lter-fce/1276/2/ce5791c0b85a6028f5a5f6c569f6c2a9
Intellectual Rights
This information is released under the Creative Commons license - Attribution - CC BY (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). The consumer of these data ("Data User" herein) is required to cite it appropriately in any publication that results from its use. The Data User should realize that these data may be actively used by others for ongoing research and that coordination may be necessary to prevent duplicate publication. The Data User is urged to contact the authors of these data if any questions about methodology or results occur. Where appropriate, the Data User is encouraged to consider collaboration or co-authorship with the authors. The Data User should realize that misinterpretation of data may occur if used out of context of the original study. While substantial efforts are made to ensure the accuracy of data and associated documentation, complete accuracy of data sets cannot be guaranteed. All data are made available "as is." The Data User should be aware, however, that data are updated periodically and it is the responsibility of the Data User to check for new versions of the data. The data authors and the repository where these data were obtained shall not be liable for damages resulting from any use or misinterpretation of the data. Thank you.
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KeywordsBig Cypress National Preserve, Weighted average, Everglades National Park, FCE LTER, Florida Coastal Everglades LTER, diatoms, freshwater, wetlands, periphyton, populations, populations
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Dataset Contact
- Name: Kelsey Solomon
- Organization: Florida International University
- Email: ksolomon@fiu.edu
- Name: Evelyn Gaiser
- Organization: Florida International University
- Email: gaisere@fiu.edu
- Position: Information Manager
- Organization: Florida Coastal Everglades LTER
- Address: Florida International University
11200 SW 8th Street, OE 148
Miami, FL 33199 USA - Email: fcelter@fiu.edu
- URL: https://fcelter.fiu.edu
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Data Table and FormatData Table: CSV file containing diatom composition data and associated environmental data.Entity Name:FCE_1276_Solomon_Comparison_DataEntity Description:CSV file containing diatom composition data and associated environmental data.Object Name:FCE_1276_Solomon_Comparison_Data.csvNumber of Header Lines:1Attribute Orientation:columnField Delimiter:,Number of Records:6709
Data Table: CSV data file containing GPS locations for each site that was sampledEntity Name:FCE_1276_Solomon_Comparison_GPSEntity Description:CSV data file containing GPS locations for each site that was sampledObject Name:FCE_1276_Solomon_Comparison_GPS.csvNumber of Header Lines:1Attribute Orientation:columnField Delimiter:,Number of Records:545
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Metadata Provider
- Organization: Florida Coastal Everglades LTER
- Address: Florida International University
11200 SW 8th Street, OE 148
Miami, FL 33199 USA - Phone: 305-348-6054
- Email: fcelter@fiu.edu
- URL: https://fcelter.fiu.edu
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Award(s)Project award(s):Award title: Establishing a Protective Phosphorus Criterion for the Big Cypress National PreserveRelated project award(s):
Funder name: National Park Service
Award number: P22AC00276-00
Award title: Aquatic fauna and periphyton production data collection
Funder name: United States Army Corps of Engineers
Award number: 912HZ-11-2-0048
Award title: Aquatic fauna and periphyton production data collection
Funder name: United States Army Corps of Engineers
Award number: W912HZ-16-2-0008
Award title: Aquatic fauna and periphyton production data collection
Funder name: United States Army Corps of Engineers
Award number: W912HZ-20-2-0018
Award title: George M. Barley Jr. Eminent Scholars Chair Endowment
Funder name: Florida International University
Award title: Periphyton Monitoring in Big Cypress National Preserve
Funder name: South Florida Inventory and Monitoring Network, Big Cypress National Preserve Resource and Management and Fire Aviation branch
Award title: LTER: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystem Research
Funder name: National Science Foundation
Award number: 2025954
Award URL: https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=2025954&HistoricalAwards=false
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Project permitsNational Park Service scientific research and collecting permit EVER-2016-SCI-0003
National Park Service scientific research and collecting permit EVER-2018-SCI-0054