Latitude: Subtropical 26° N Temperature: Cool mo: 26° C Hot mo: 33° C Substrate: Oolitic limestone Rainfall: Wet mo: 230 mm Dry mo: 33 mm.

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Latitude: Subtropical 26° N Temperature: Cool mo: 26° C Hot mo: 33° C Substrate: Oolitic limestone Rainfall: Wet mo: 230 mm Dry mo: 33 mm

Welcome to the John C. Gifford Arboretum University of Miami Founded in 1947, the John C. Gifford Arboretum is a living collection of tropical trees. Famil y and Order Exhibits each is a lineage of trees with shared evolved characteristics Gymnosperms & Basal Angiosperms several distinct lineages that retain ancient characteristics South Florida Natives What is a Tree? Maya Cocoa Garden Locate the exhibits on the map to the right and wander the trails to view the plants. You will discover an amazing array of forms, textures and scents: leaves, trunks, flowers, fruits and chemistry, providing food, fiber, medicine, perfume and more, not to mention wood. Enjoy! Sapindales: the lychee, mahogany, mango, citrus, and gumbo limbo order Moraceae & other Rosales: the fig family, a part of the rose, hemp, and elm order Arecaceae: the palm family Bignoniaceae: the trumpet tree and jacaranda family Sapotaceae & other Ericales: the sapodilla family, a part of the ebony, brazil nut, and tea order Myrtales: the guava, tropical almond, henna, and princess flower order Malvales: the hibiscus, kapok, cocoa, baobab, and dipterocarp order Fabaceae: the bean, mimosa, and poinciana family Gymnosperms & Basal Angiosperms: bearers of cones and ancient flowers Euphorbiaceae & other Malpighiales: the spurge family, a part of the passion flower, willow and and fried egg tree order rosids monocots eurosids II asterids eurosids I eudicots euasterids I Gymnosperms Moraceae & other Rosales Sapotaceae & other Ericales Fabaceae Basal Angiosperms Sapindales Malvales What is a Tree? Arecaceae South Florida Natives Myrtales Euphorbiaceae & other Malpighiales Maya Cocoa Garden Bignoniaceae A PHYLOGENETIC TREE portrays evolutionary relationships of groups of species. Groups on nearby branches are more closely related. This one was adapted from the “Angiosperm Phylogeny Website” of the Missouri Botanical Garden (2007) to show you how the groups of plants in the John C. Gifford Arboretum are related. RENOVATION March 2008 Master Plan by Geomantic Designs Exhibits planned and designed by John Cozza Funding provided by Institute of Museum and Library Services Friends of the Gifford Arboretum University of Miami

Institute for Theoretical and Mathematical Ecology University of Miami Coral Gables, FL USA Mathematics Steve Cantrell Chris Cosner Shigui Ruan Biology Don De Angelis Carol Horvitz Marine Science Jerry Ault Don Olson

connection Current lab group David Matlaga (PhD expected 2008) David Matlaga (PhD expected 2008) Demographic and experimental comparative ecology of clonal propagules vs. seedlings of a neotropical herb Carlos Garcia-Robledo (PhD expected 2009) Carlos Garcia-Robledo (PhD expected 2009) Demographic, ecological and evolutionary response of specialist and generalist rolled-leaf herbivores to novel exotic host plants in the Zingiberales: field and lab experiments Lucero Sevillano (PhD expected 2009) Lucero Sevillano (PhD expected 2009) Demographic impact of two insects (biocontrol agents) on an invasive exotic tree in the Everglades John Cozza (PhD expected 2008) John Cozza (PhD expected 2008) Gender plasticity and optimality in a neotroprical Begonia: effects of light, minerals and developmental constraints Robert McElderry (PhD expected 2013) Robert McElderry (PhD expected 2013) Not yet defined: something to do with demography, herbivory and rarity in a tropical or subtropical plant

Lab alumni Graduate degrees Kathleen Lemon (M.S. Dec. 1989) Ricardo Calvo (Ph.D. 1990) Josiane LeCorff (Ph.D. 1992) John Pascarella (Ph.D. 1995) Andrea Freedman (M.S. Dec. 1995) Matthew Slocum (Ph.D. 1997) G. Rob Burgess (M.S. Dec 2002) Rachel King (Ph.D. 2003) Derek Johnson (Ph.D. 2003) Tony Koop (Ph.D. 2003) Douglas Scofield (Ph.D. 2004) Visiting scholars: Luciano Lopes, Brazil, Spring 2007 Eduardo Mendoza, Mexico, Marco Aurelio Pizo, Brazil, Fall 1997 H. B. Vasistha, India,