Join Florida Hikes!

Membership is free. Members can submit hikes, articles, trip reports, and photos, can post on the forum, and share maps, photos, and personal connections in an online hiking community behind the scenes. Join today!

Newsflash

Thanks to efforts by forestry staff, the Little Big Econ section of the Florida Trail near Oviedo has reopened for hiking.
Read more...
 
Florida's Habitats Print E-mail
Written by Sandra Friend   
Article Index
Florida's Habitats
Coastal Habitats
Forests
Prairies
Scrub
Wetlands

Prairies

Orchid in prairie grasses, Jonathan Dickinson State Park

Florida's prairies come in two flavors: dry and wet. Just like the prairies of the Midwest, these prairies are treeless and open grasslands, many of which are seasonally inundated with water. Wildflowers like deer’s-tongue, blazing star, and pine lily thrive here, lending color to the grasslands year-round. Prairies may contain islands of hammocks, or may be islands themselves within a pine flatwoods or scrub habitat.

Prairies can host bayheads, cypress domes, and freshwater marshes . Less than 20% of Florida’s prairies are under state protection; most have been converted to cattle ranches, sod farms, and citrus groves. The Everglades contains the world’s only freshwater marl prairies, or sawgrass prairies, where vast expanses of razor-sharp sawgrass grow out of a base of exposed limestone covered with just a few inches of slowly flowing water, the “river of grass” that moves towards the sea.


 
< Prev   Next >