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fragment at the Complex.
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EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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The U.S. Department of Agriculture owns 8.3 acres of pine rockland at the Subtropical
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Horticulture Research Station (Chapman Field) at Old Cutler Road and Southwest 136th Street.
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Pine rockland fragments on this site are poorly managed and could be developed.
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Two municipal governments own pine rockland fragments. The City of South Miami owns the
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0.4 acre Girl Scout Little House. The Village of Palmetto Bay owns a 4.7 acre pine rockland at
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Coral Reef Park.
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The Miami-Dade County Department of Environmental Resources Management (DERM) owns
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and maintains a small preserve, exclusive of the EEL program – the 2.8 acre Andrew Dodge
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Pineland. In addition, the Miami-Dade County Department of Enterprise Technology Services
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also owns 9.2 acres of pine rockland at a communication facility on Southwest 264th Street
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adjacent to the Camp Owaissa Bauer Addition EEL site. The EEL program has successfully
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negotiated with the Department of Enterprise Technology Services to restore and manage the
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property.
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The pine rockland referred to as the Navy Wells Pineland Preserve at Southwest 192nd Avenue
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and 360th Street contains almost 300 acres of pine rockland. The entire pine rockland area has
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been traditionally managed in its entirety by the Parks and Recreation Department. This pine
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rockland fragment does however have several owners. The Miami-Dade County Parks and
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Recreation Department owns 198.4 acres of pine rockland here. The Florida Keys Aqueduct
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Authority, an entity created by legislation by the State of Florida in 1937 to provide drinking
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water to the Florida Keys, owns 77.3 acres of the pine rockland. The U.S. Government owns an
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additional 20.7 acres. The County Property Appraiser database indicates the address of the
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Miami Federal Courthouse for the four (4) individual parcels that they own.
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3.8.5 Private Preserves
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Few privately owned pine rockland preserves exist. Exceptions include the 13-acre Pine Ridge
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Sanctuary owned by Terry and Barbara Glancy, a 1.5-acre preserve and another 0.75 acre
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preserve owned by The Institute for Regional Conservation (IRC), and the 7.8-acre Porter
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Russell Pineland Preserve owned by the Tropical Audubon Society.
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3.8.6 Natural Forest Community System
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The Natural Forest Community System (NFC) consists of 127 pine rockland fragments and 46
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rockland hammock fragments that are protected in part from development by the Miami-Dade
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County Tree and Forest Resources Protection ordinance. Since the 1990s, NFC acreage had
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dropped greatly, a continuing trend, even though they are legally protected. Much habitat
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clearing is done illegally. Some of these NFC fragments are cherished by their owners and will
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not be developed, at least in the near term, but they are typically poorly managed.
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3.8.7 Other
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The largest private landowner of Pine Rocklands is the University of Miami, who owns about
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132 acres at the Richmond Pineland Complex. The University owns two distinct parcels. One 65-
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acre parcel is the University South Campus off of Southwest 152nd Avenue, just west of Miami
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Metrozoo. The University currently has plans to develop this property for private homes,
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EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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destroying the pine rockland. The second parcel, recently transferred from the U.S. Government,
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is 67 acres at Southwest 168th Street and 117th Avenue. The University has not announced its
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plans for the property, but full preservation is unlikely.
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3.9 Future Preservation Estimates
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There are currently about 1,092 acres of pine rocklands that are protected by government
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agencies or private organizations and citizens. The EEL program has almost exhausted all
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opportunities for new pine rockland acquisitions because remaining pine rocklands are owned by
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unwilling sellers or are too small. The largest remaining areas of pine rockland that are not
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preserved are within the Richmond Pineland Complex and are owned by the Department of
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Defense, Federal Board of Prisons, University of Miami, and Miami-Metrozoo. These areas total
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to about 585 acres. Even if half of this acreage is acquired by EEL or other wise preserved, and
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the EEL makes two more planned acquisitions in other parts of the county, there is likely to be
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no more than about 1,400 to 1,500 acres of pine rockland preserved in perpetuity in Miami-Dade
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County.
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3.10 Exotic Organisms
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Several non-indigenous plant and animal
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species have become, or could potentially
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become, pest species affecting the quality
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of the pine rockland remnants in EEL sites.
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Some of the plant and animal species are
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briefly discussed below.
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3.10.1 Plants
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Exotic plant species occur in every pine
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rockland fragment in Miami-Dade County.
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In botanical surveys of 99 pine rockland
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fragments in 2004 and 2005, 173 exotic
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plant taxa were recorded. The most
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frequently recorded exotic plants, in
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decreasing order of frequency, were Brazilian pepper, Burma reed, woman’s tongue, natal grass,
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shrubverbena, Australian umbrellatree, gold coast jasmine, shrubby false buttonweed, wild bean,
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and China brake. Of these 173 exotics, 57 are listed as Category I or II invasive species by the
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Florida Exotic Pest Plant Council (FLEPPC) (Appendix C).
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The most problematic invasive plant species in pine rocklands include Brazilian pepper, Burma
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reed, and natal grass. These species are aggressive invaders and once established can spread very
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quickly throughout a site if they are not managed.
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3.10.2 Animals
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Since virtually all exotic animal introductions have been human-mediated, a population boom in
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Miami-Dade County over the last 30-40 years has resulted in a dramatic increase in the number
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of established exotic species in this area. As a result, populations of exotic animals have invaded
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Miami-Dade County pineland with invading Burma reed
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Photo by Keith Bradley, IRC
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EEL Program, Management Plan, Part II – Pine Rockland (DRAFT) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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Page 26
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all available habitats within urbanized MiamiDade County, including pine rocklands, and many
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species are expanding their range into the
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neighboring wilderness areas. The most frequently
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observed animal species in Miami-Dade pine
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rocklands is often the introduced brown anole.
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While the full biological and ecological
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implications of this invasion are poorly
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understood, there are certain species that are
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clearly more problematic than others. Feral
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domestic cats also commonly have negative
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impacts on pine rockland EEL sites. For a
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discussion on F. catus, please refer to Section
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5.2.2.2 of Part I of this document. Other species
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