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A sea of grass stretches on in all directions with no break and no sign of humanity.
The Everglades Shark Valley, part of Big Cypress, in the Florida Everglades. © Eric Blackmore

Stories in Florida

Protecting The Everglades

One of the United States' Last Great Grasslands

There are precious few landscapes in the United States as impressive as the Everglades, and none as definitively iconic to its home state. The Everglades is to Florida what the Rocky Mountains are to Colorado or the Finger Lakes are to New York.

Though contained entirely in Florida, its vital ecological importance resonates far beyond the Sunshine State. And because of that, the Everglades belongs to all of us.

Quote: Joe Podgor

The Everglades is a test. If we pass it, we may get to keep the planet.

Friends of the Everglades

Once spanning nearly 11 million acres, the Everglades has been whittled down through land conversion and drainage. What remains is a heavily altered landscape, one out of sync with Florida’s larger ecology. Changes to the Everglades affect far more than the 8 million people and countless species of animals that call the system home; they pulse outward and downstream, jeopardizing nature’s fragile balance everywhere along the course.

In addition to the consequences of years of ditching and diking, the Everglades faces ever-increasing threats from the impacts of climate change, including sea-level rise, reduced precipitation and higher temperatures.

But there’s hope for the Everglades.

Scenes From the Everglades

A look at some important species that rely on the protected lands of the Everglades to raise their young, find shelter, and forage for food.

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A mother alligator transports one of  her brood on her snout.
Two Great Blue Herons (Ardea herodias) standing in a tree.
A close up of a great egret.
Wood storks wading in the water.
East Indian manatee takes a breath.
Bobcat and kitten face to face with mouths open.
Two roseate spoonbills sit in a nest in a tree.
A river otter sits on a downed tree surveying their swampy territory.
A Florida softshell turtle lays in the sun, basking in the rays, while grains of sand rest on the reptiles shell.
Florida panther.

For more than five decades, TNC and partners have been working to protect this critical system. To date, that work has resulted in the protection of more than 360,000 acres, mostly within a 170-mile swath of working cattle ranches, longleaf pine savannahs and seasonal wetlands in the northern end of the system. At the center of these efforts is the 11,500-acre Disney Wilderness Preserve in Kissimmee near the headwaters of the Everglades, where we’re developing and sharing best practices for restoration of former ranchlands.

Because of the unique makeup of property ownership in the Everglades—there’s a roughly 60/40 split between federal and private ownership—there are tremendous opportunities to build on existing conservation projects like The Disney Wilderness Preserve to boost the system’s resilience to future threats.

In order to seize those opportunities, TNC has launched a bold 10-Year Plan for the Everglades. At its core is an emphasis on connecting protected lands and waters for far-ranging species like the Florida panther and wood storks. The new plan also seeks to:

  • Permanently protect 300,000 more acres of privately/publicly owned lands allowing for the movement of wide-ranging wildlife and for the preservation of economically sustainable ranching in the region.
  • Restore the water storage functions of previously ditched and drained freshwater wetlands in the Northern Everglades, resulting in 100,000 acre-feet of natural water storage—efforts that will benefit estuaries, water supply, lands and wildlife throughout the entire Everglades.
  • Ensure that 75 percent of publicly owned conservation lands are healthy and properly managed to meet threats from altered fire regimes, invasive species and changing climate.
  • Maintain ranching or other low-intensity agricultural uses across at least 90 percent of the 2011 footprint of 1.1 million acres in order to retain the long-term potential to expand both protection and restoration efforts.

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Today we have an unparalleled opportunity to conserve and restore a fully functional, reconnected wetland corridor in the Everglades. It’s a window of opportunity that’s wide open and the time to act is now. Together, we can pass the test.