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Florida Coastal Everglades LTER

Home » Sites » Florida Coastal Everglades LTER

Site Contacts

Lead Principal Investigator: John Kominoski
Administrative Contact: Mike Rugge
Information Manager: Gabriel Kamener
Education Contact: Nicholas Oehm
Broadening Participation Contact: Ryan James
Site Grad Rep A: Paige Kleindl
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Site Details

Research Topics:
How regional controls (climate change, changing freshwater inflow) control population and ecosystem level dynamics in wetland-dominated coastal landscapes, with an emphasis on the oligohaline zone and taking advantage of the oligotrophic status of the entire coastal Everglades system. Read More

We are investigating how variability in regional climate, freshwater inputs, disturbance, and perturbations affect the coastal Everglades ecosystem. Our long term research program will focus on testing the following central idea and hypotheses: Regional processes mediated by water flow control population and ecosystem level dynamics at any location within the coastal Everglades landscape. This phenomenon is best exemplified in the dynamics of an estuarine oligohaline zone where fresh water draining phosphorus-limited Everglades marshes mixes with water from the more nitrogen-limited coastal ocean.

Hypothesis 1: In nutrient-poor coastal systems, long-term changes in the quantity or quality of organic matter inputs will exert strong and direct controls on estuarine productivity, because inorganic nutrients are at such low levels.

Hypothesis 2: Interannual and long-term changes in freshwater flow controls the magnitude of nutrients and organic matter inputs to the estuarine zone, while ecological processes in the freshwater marsh and coastal ocean control the quality and characteristics of those inputs.

Hypothesis 3: Long-term changes in freshwater flow (primarily manifest through management and Everglades restoration) will interact with long-term changes in the climatic and disturbance (sea level rise, hurricanes, fires) regimes to modify ecological pattern and process across coastal landscapes.

We will be testing our hypotheses along freshwater to marine gradients in two Everglades drainage basins (Shark River Slough and Taylor Slough). We have observed a clear productivity peak in the low salinity zone of Shark River Slough (SRS) but not Taylor Slough (TS). This peak appears to be the result of low P, high N freshwater meeting higher P, lower N marine water. We will quantify nutrient regeneration from dissolved organic matter (DOM), and expect this to be a major contribution to this oligohaline productivity peak. We will also examine how this stimulus of the microbial loop affects consumer dynamics. This LTER will thus focus on how changes in freshwater flow and climatic variability control the relative roles that nutrients and organic matter play in regulating estuarine and coastal productivity.

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Description:
The majority of Florida Coastal Everglades LTER sites are located in freshwater marsh, estuarine mangroves, seagrass estuary ecosystems in Everglades National Park. Everglades National Park covers approximately 4300 km² of south Florida and is part of the greater Everglades ecosystem which extends north to Lake Okeechobee and the Kissimmee River. Our research focuses on understanding ecosystem processes along the two major drainage basins in Everglades National Park: Shark River Slough and Taylor Slough. We are particularly interested in the dynamics at the estuarine ecotone, where freshwater and estuarine wetlands meet. This ecotone is dynamic in the landscape in response to changing freshwater inflow (with Everglades restoration), sea level rise (climate change responses), and disturbance (particularly hurricanes and fire).
History:
The FCE LTER is a relatively young program, established in 2000 when NSF expanded the LTER network to include 3 new coastal sites. FCE research questions focus on how changing freshwater inflow, sea level rise and climate change, and disturbance interact to control ecological pattern and process in oligotrophic ecosystems. These questions tend to focus on the oligohaline ecotone region of the coastal Everglades. The entire FCE LTER site is enclosed in Everglades National Park, which at over 4300 km2 is the third largest wilderness in the lower 48 states. We cover much of this large, diverse, low-nutrient landscape with 17 permanent sites located along two transects oriented with the natural flow of water. The FCE LTER scientific group is as diverse as the landscape, and includes senior scientists, staff, and students from nearly 10 universities, from all key state and federal agencies, and from several NGOs. Read More

The Everglades itself is also quite young, having been formed in the last 5000 years during the Holocene climate stabilization, as the southern Florida peninsula became steadily wetter. Human influence on the Everglades became significant only about 100 years ago. At that time, there were fewer than 2000 non-native people living in south Florida, while today there are over 6 million. In the intervening century, humans have dramatically altered the south Florida landscape. The remaining Everglades is only about half the size that it was in 1900. Over 2500 km of canals and levees, and hundreds of water control structures have been built to compartmentalize, drain, and manage the remaining natural system. At the same time, 95% of the 6 million people living in south Florida get their drinking water from the shallow Biscayne aquifer, which is recharged in near real time by the Everglades. That the Everglades provides this critical ecosystem service is, surprisingly, not well known in south Florida. A primary focus of Everglades Restoration (a 20 year, $8 billion rehabilitation based on a state and federal partnership) is to return the remaining Everglades to a healthy and stable state so that it can continue to provide this, and many other, ecosystem services. The FCE LTER Program is very much involved in this environmental rehabilitation effort, and will play an increasingly important role in Everglades’ science in the future.

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Location

Latitude: 25.4682
Longitude: -80.8533
Biome: Freshwater Marsh/Estuary
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Grant History:

    LTER-04B: DEB–2025954
    LTER: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystem Research
    Start Date: March 1, 2021

    LTER-04: DEB–1832229
    LTER: Drivers of Abrupt Change in the Florida Coastal Everglades
    Start Date: December 1, 2018

    LTER-03: DEB–1237517
    LTER: FCE III – Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research
    Start Date: December 1, 2012

    LTER-02: DEB–0620409
    FCE LTER II: Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research
    Start Date: December 1, 2006

    LTER-0REGIONAL: DBI–9910514
    LTER COERCE-Coastal Oligotrophic Ecosystems Research, the Everglades. Regional Controls of Population and Ecosystem Dynamics in an Oligotrophic Wetland-dominated Coastal Landscap
    Start Date: May 1, 2000

Updated June 12, 2025

Key Research Findings

Hidden Origins of Coastal Productivity
Disturbance Interactions Define Coastal Gradients
Sea Level Rise May Decouple Carbon Sources / Sinks
Donor Controlled Food Webs

View all key research findings
for this site

Florida Coastal Everglades LTER News

Movement ecology PhD position | Florida Coastal Everglades LTER
From Species Richness to Ecosystem Resilience: a Synthesis Study of Marine Consumer Nutrient Supply
Open Rank Tenure-Track Faculty in Marine Microbial Ecology | Florida Coastal Everglades LTER
Postdoc: resilience of Everglades recreational fisheries to hydroclimatic variation and extreme events
Assistant Professor, 9 Month Salaried (Oceanography) | Florida State University
Post-Doctoral Research Associate in Quantitative Ecology
More Than a Scientist: The Seeds and Fruits of Artistic Expression in the FCE LTER
Postdoc | Gaiser Aquatic Ecology Lab, FIU
Meandering Through the Mangrove Forests of the Florida Coastal Everglades
BioRender Webinar: Learn to make publication quality science graphics
EPA Living Shorelines Workshop—virtual presentation to the LTER
Lab Manager | Florida Coastal Everglades LTER
Senior Scientist, South Florida Water Management District, Everglades Systems Assessment Section
A beige net surrounds a brown swamp eel, making an s shape on the net material.
Swamp Eels Wreak Havoc on Small Species at the Florida Coastal Everglades LTER
Tenure Track Faculty Position in Coastal or Estuarine Physical Oceanography | FCE LTER
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© 2025 LTER. Managed by LTER Network Office, NCEAS, UCSB, 1021 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101
Except where otherwise noted, material may be re-used under a Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0 license.

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grant # 1545288, 10/1/2015-9/30/19 and # 1929393, 09/01/2019-08/31/2024, and # 2419138, 08/01/2024-present . Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in the material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

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