How do abiotic and biotic processes affect the spatial morphology of a landscape and what drives the distribution of species and communities?
Answers to these questions vary across ecosystems and with scale. Selecting an appropriate scale of analysis is fundamental to investigating and understanding the ecological processes that drive landscape morphology, assembly patterns of primary producers, and the spatial distribution of habitats used by consumers of higher trophic levels.
The Everglades landscape and its surrounding seascapes in Florida Bay and the Gulf of Mexico provide a diverse mosaic of ecosystems that offer a unique laboratory to study ecological processes that interrelate the marine ecosystems of coral reefs and seagrass beds to coastal mangrove forests and vast terrestrial, graminoid-dominated marshes and prairies, tree islands, and cypress and pine forests.
We focus on ecotones to better understand ecosystem shifts in the Everglades landscape mosaic that are driven by changing environmental conditions including interactions of sea-level rise, management practices of freshwater restoration, fire regimes, and passing tropical storm events.
The different processes that operate and interact at different scales across the landscape often require cross-scale and multi-scale modeling of ecological processes and patterns. To understand ecosystem processes we maintain permanent transects and plots that provide long-term time series at a fine spatial scale. What we learn about processes at a fine scale we scale up to the ecosystem and landscapes using remote sensing data at various spatial resolutions and scaling methods that allow for larger-scale inferences, and prediction.
Crucial for system-wide scaling are methods that allow for estimation and reduction of information loss. The effects of categorical data scaling and the establishment of multi-scale quantitative classification systems are the focus of our research.
Research Interests:
(2) Plant Community Transitions:
(a) Glycophytic - Halophytic Community Dynamics in Response to Sea-Level Rise
(b) Effects of Hydroperiod Length and Fire on Spatio-Temporal Dynamics of Freshwater Wetland Communities
(3) Woody and Graminoid Species Co-Existence Patterns in Wetland Ecosystems
Projects
Title: Landscape-Scale Plant-Community Succession in Wetlands under Changing Hydrology and Fire Regimes.
Funded by: Everglades National Park
Lead PIs: Dr. Daniel Gann, Dr. Jennifer Richards
Title: Modeling and Correcting Vegetation-Induced Bias for LiDAR-Derived Digital Terrain Models in Water Conservation Areas
Funded by: South Florida Water Management District
Lead PIs: Dr. Daniel Gann, Dr. Danielle Ogurcak
Title: Tree Island Dynamics in Everglades National Park
Funded by: U.S Army Corps of Engineers
Lead PIs: Dr. Jay Sah, Dr. Daniel Gann, Dr. Michael Ross
Title: MRI: Development of an instrument for student and faculty research on Multimodal
Environmental Observations
Funded by: National Science Foundation
Lead PIs: Dr. Naphtalie Rishe, Dr. Daniel Gann, Dr. Shahin Vasigh, Dr. Sitharama Iyengar, Dr. Todd Crowl
Publications & Datasets
To view all publications, please visit Dr. Daniel Gann's profile on FIU Digital Commons.