South Florida pine flatwoods


The south Florida pine flatwoods are a flatwoods forest community found in central and southern Florida, ending north of Orlando. They are dominant from just north of Lake Okeechobee southward, sharing affinity with similar communities in the Caribbean. Their understory is partly herbaceous. As rainfall varies seasonally, they sport high plant biodiversity.
Appearing savanna-like, these flatwoods have open canopies of slash pine above a dense understory of low shrubs and grasses in places where low-intensity fires are frequent. Where fires have been suppressed, slash pine, shrubs, and saw palmetto become more dense.
In addition to saw palmetto, the shrubs Appalachian tea, coastal plain staggerbush, dwarf live oak, shiny blueberry, and rosy camphorweed can be found in the flatwoods. Wiregrass is the dominant grass.
This system is similar to Florida dry prairie, but has taller and denser shrub cover. Like other flatwoods, South Florida pine flatwoods are fire-dependent, but burn more frequently than typical flatwoods. They have been often used for rangeland. South Florida pine flatwoods are a mainstay of the Florida panther.