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J.W. Corbett WMA


J. W. Corbett WMA

J. W. Corbett Home
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Natural Communities

photo giant leather fern
Betsy Purdun
Giant leather fern along Hungryland Boardwalk

 

Corbett is in the transitional zone between the uplands of central Florida and the nearly level Everglades. The most extensive natural communities on Corbett are pine flatwoods, marshes and wet prairies, and cypress sloughs and domes. Hammocks are found in isolated locations throughout Corbett.

The Hungryland trail and boardwalk passes through one of these hammocks. Within Corbett are a number of disturbed areas including 700 acres of old tomato fields, which are being converted into food plots for wildlife.

See Major Natural Communities.

 

 

photo treated climbing fern
Treated invasive Old World climbing fern
Photos by Betsy Purdum

Management

Invasive non-native plants are a serious problem on Corbett as they are on many public lands throughout the state. The number one enemy on Corbett is Lygodium microphyllum-Old World climbing fern, followed by Melaleuca and Brazilian pepper. Lygodium is a thicket-forming, climbing, and extremely invasive fern found in swamps, along river banks, wet disturbed sites, pinelands, and cabbage palm hammocks in central and south Florida. According to Gil Nelson in The Ferns of Florida, it was rare in Florida just 30 years ago. In 1978 it was found only on a few acres in the eastern third of Martin and Palm Beach counties, but by 1997 had invaded more than 39,000 acres. Biologists and managers on many of south Florida’s public lands, including Corbett, spend much of their time and resources attempting to control this noxious weed. Volunteers at Corbett work to attack isolated patches or to do follow ups after commercial contractors.

 

Our mission: Managing fish and wildlife resources for their long-term well-being and the benefit of people.