LAND MANAGEMENT:
Preserving and Restoring Biodiversity
Archbold Biological Station has the great privilege and responsibility of caring for 8,600 acres of land in south-central Florida. The 5,000-acre Station property is preserved as a matrix of pristine native vegetation, including oak and rosemary scrubs, pine flatwoods, cutthroat seeps and seasonal wetlands. The adjacent 3,600-acre Reserve property contains both natural areas and extensive cattle pastures. Habitat management practices are dictated by both research and conservation priorities. The Station also manages the 10,300-acre Buck Island Ranch, site of the MacArthur Agro-ecology Research Center.
Land Management Policies. All property is fenced and posted. Pets are not permitted on the property. Relocation of native organisms onto the property is not permitted. Firelanes and roads provide access to the property and are also used for fire control. Research programs are coordinated to minimize their effects on one another or on populations of threatened or endangered native species. Certain scientific collecting and experimentation is permitted after consultation with staff Research Biologists.
Lightning fires were prevalent throughout the region in presettlement times, creating habitats that are pyrogenic and require frequent, patchy fires to maintain biodiversity. Therefore, fire is a key component of both research and land management at Archbold. The Station's fire management plan strives to balance the responsibility of maintaining the Station's biodiversity with the needs of research. All fires are mapped in detail and these maps are digitized into the GIS. A detailed 40-year GIS fire history database, plus ample opportunity to prescribe and conduct research burns, provides one of the finest research sites for fire ecologists anywhere in the United States. Prescribed burning is used to maintain native species composition and structure, or to test hypotheses about responses of native elements or systems to different fire regimes.
Land Management at Archbold also focuses on control of the many non-native species that threaten Florida ecosystems. The primary focus is on invasive plants. Plants from around the world can flourish in southern Florida’s sub-tropical climate. Unfortunate introductions of these plants, whether purposeful or accidental, have led to thousands of acres of infestations across the state. On Station properties, non-native plants are limited primarily to disturbed areas. The Station has an Exotics Treatment and Monitoring Plan. Non-native plants are treated through mechanical means and with herbicides. Many species require more than one treatment to eliminate individual populations. In addition to plants, non-native animals (including wild hogs and feral cats) are excluded from the property to the greatest extent possible.
The Station also owns three nearby satellite tracts. The Malcolm and Jeanne Watters Marsh is a 17-acre (6.9-ha) tract between Lake June and Lake Henry. The Harris Tract is an 8-acre (3.2-ha) shrub marsh on Lake Istokpoga, one of the largest lakes in the state. The Henry T. and Helen C. Price Memorial Tract contains 8 acres (3.2-ha) of scrub, hammock, swamp, and marsh habitat on the north shore of Lake Placid. These small tracts provide research opportunities in many habitats not represented on the Station's main property or on the Ranch.
