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URGENT ACTION NEEDED: Please send a fax NOW to Washington and
Tallahassee in support of the Everglades Skyway. Click
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For more background, check out the Build
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The marshy grasslands of the Florida
Everglades -- home to wading birds, alligators, and the rare Florida panther -- are on the
brink of collapse, the victim of over-development, argricultural pollution, and
overzealous water-diversion projects. |
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Gliding across the saw-grass prairie, meandering around vast islands
of pine or percolating through the mangroves into Florida Bay, the
Everglades will always be a river -- a 60-mile wide river. A "river
of grass" is what conservationist Marjory Stoneman Douglas called
the enormous wetland that covers most of the southern Florida peninsula.
She died in 1998 at the age of 108 after teaching the world a valuable
and painful lesson: wetlands are not to be drained.
Douglas' book, "River of Grass," put the Everglades on the map. "Nothing
anywhere else is like them: their vast glittering openness, wider than the enormous
visible round of the horizon, the racing free saltness and sweetness of their massive
winds, under the dazzling blue heights of space," wrote Douglas. "They are
unique also in the simplicity, the diversity, the related harmony of the forms of life
they enclose." Everglades' wildlife have depended on a complex annual rhythm of
drought and flood. At one time, flying "super-colonies" of wading birds would
blot out the sun.
The Everglades headwaters actually begin just south of Orlando from the
Kissimmee River, which runs into Florida's largest lake, Okeechobee. The water
historically "spilled over" the bottom half of the peninsula in a solid sheet
generally no more than two feet deep. This 300-mile sheet of water provided habitat for
hundreds of thousands of wading birds like herons, spoonbills and pelicans. Panthers,
deer, crocodiles and alligators roamed the banks of this "river."
Today, 14 federally-listed endangered species rely on the Everglades unique resources.
They include the wood stork, the West Indian manatee and the American crocodile. In fact,
the only place in the world where crocodile and the alligator live side-by-side is in the
Everglades.
In 1949, after years of lobbying by conservationist Ernest Coe and others, the federal
government dedicated Everglades National Park to protect the southern portion of the
Everglades and Florida Bay from growing human pressures. But the Park's boundaries left
out crucial portions of the Everglades -- the upper portion of Key Largo and the coral
reefs to the east, and the Big Cypress swamp to the north. Conservationists insisted that
without those lands the Park had no control of its water supply and might not survive.
In that same year, Congress authorized the Army Corps of Engineers to build a massive
system of canals, levees and pumping stations to decrease the risk of flooding and to
drain south Florida for development and agriculture. This project, known as the Central
and South Florida Project, fueled an economic boom. But it also began the gradual decline
of the Everglades system. Water that once flowed as sheets was now compartmentalized and
controlled by man and machines. Acres upon acres of sugar farms sprung out of the rich
peat soil below Lake Okeechobee, and Miami suburbs consumed the land where saw-grass
swamps once reigned.
Today 5.5 million people call south Florida home and plans are under way to accommodate
another 7 million to 10 million new inhabitants. Sugar farms continue to dump thousands of
pounds of phosphates into the water, contaminating plants and wildlife. While the
government tries to time its pumps and control structures to imitate the natural water
cycle, they generally fail. The natural system always comes third, after urban and
agriculture needs have been met.
One short century of human settlement in south Florida has pushed the Everglades to the
brink. Nearly half the Everglades has been drained. Nine out of every 10 wading birds have
disappeared since the turn of the century, and the Florida panther count stands perilously
at 30. Mercury-laden fish, a sure sign of polluted water, are ubiquitous.
Tragically, the natural but fragile balance that made this wildland flourish has been
altered. But with sound science, the natural functioning of the greater Everglades region
might be repaired. Engineers, scientists, anthropologists, land managers and
conservationists agree that drastic steps are necessary if we are to rescue the
Everglades. Plans are in development to rework south Florida's complex plumbing system and
restore the ecosystem's natural balance.
Land acquisition is a key component of any restoration plan. Extending the park's
boundaries will bolster habitat-protection efforts and provide a protective buffer between
the natural landscape and ever-expanding urban areas. Removing lands from destructive
sugar farming will help improve water quality, and will provide much-needed water storage
capacity. Land acquisition for water preserves must come first, before the land available
is lost forever to development. Funding from the Land and Water Conservation Fund would
enable the Park Service to purchase critical lands from willing sellers, thus carrying out
the first step toward restoring the viability of this wondrous ecosystem.
It is essential that new water storage be used to water the withering
wildlands of the Everglades, rather than to develop more agriculture
and sprawling suburban communities, as some plans have proposed.
In addition, Everglades restoration efforts must remove the dikes
that prevent fresh water from reaching the Everglades in order to
restore natural characteristics of water flows in south Florida
not seen in decades.
More than 1 million tourists from all over the world flock to Everglades
National Park expecting to see the healthy, natural "river
of grass," first made famous by Douglas. But her vision of
the Everglades is gone. A major national restoration effort is needed
to ensure this national treasure is not entirely lost for future
generations."The Everglades is a test," said Douglas.
"If we pass, we get to keep the planet." Let's hope we
do.

For more information about protecting the Everglades, contact:
Jonathan Ullman jonathan.ullman@sierraclub.org
Frank Jackalone frank.jackalone@sierraclub.org
National Wildlands
| SPARE Report Main
Photo courtesy Tom Till; used with permission.
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