While I take my Florida Master Naturalist classes to Keewaydin Island every year, the experience never gets old, and is always unique. My most recent trip last Friday was certainly no different (
I can say it was the wettest trip I ever led thanks to late afternoon rains!)Keewaydin or Key island is an unbridged 8-mile-long barrier island off the coast of Naples, Florida. Over ninety percent of the island is managed by
Rookery Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve. The island makes for an excellent outdoor classroom to teach about barrier island ecology as well as the importance of balancing resource protection with public access. My colleagues and I lead our students on a walking transect of the southern end of the island where they can see how quickly the island's different plant communities switch based on various environmental conditions such as elevation, soil types, wind exposure, and temperature to name a few. In a matter of a few hundred yards, we walked through a tidal mangrove creek, coastal strand community, primary and secondary dune system, and of course Keewaydin's beautiful beach. Enjoy the pictures!
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Arriving at the island |
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Examining the low energy shoreline of Key Island |
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Me pointing out the pneumataphores associated with black mangroves |
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Our ride to the island |
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Mangrove identification practice |
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Traversing through a mangrove creek |
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A quick lesson on how mangroves deal with salt in the estuarine environment |
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One of many fiddler crabs found |
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Got fiddler crab? |
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Moving into the coastal transition (aka strand) zone |
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Marco Island in the distance |
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The flower of the Prickly Pear Cactus |
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Examining the wrack line (looks like they found a Lightning Whelk egg case) |
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So many cool finds along the beach |
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A horse conch egg case on the left and a lightning whelk |
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Renee Wilson from Rookery Bay talks to the group about the "fish stunning" abilities of the Jamaican Dogwood tree |
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