Water in south Florida once flowed freely from the
Kissimmee River to Lake Okeechobee and southward over low-lying lands
to the estuaries of Biscayne Bay, the Ten Thousand Islands, and Florida
Bay. This shallow, slow-moving sheet of water covered almost 11,000
square miles, creating a mosaic of ponds, sloughs, sawgrass marshes,
hardwood hammock, and forested uplands. For thousands of years this
intricate system evolved into a finely balanced ecosystem that formed
the biological infrastructure for the southern half of the state.
Early colonial settlers and land developers viewed
the Everglades as a worthless swamp in need of reclamation. The dream
of draining the swampland took hold in the first half of the 1800s.
By the 1880s developers started digging drainage canals, which took
place without an understanding of the dynamics of the ecosystem and
were generally inadequate for the task. They caused localized silting
problems, but overall the ecosystem was resilient enough to sustain
itself.
The notion of draining the vast wetland persisted.
Expanded dredging efforts between 1905 and 1910 transformed large tracts
from wetland to agricultural land. This abundance of "new"
land stimulated the first of several south Florida land booms. Railroads
constructed by entrepreneurs like Henry B. Plant and Henry M. Flagler
made the region more accessible and attractive to tourists. By the 1920s
visitors and new residents flocked to blossoming towns like Fort Lauderdale,
Miami, and Fort Myers. As they arrived, developers cut more canals and
built new roads. To ensure good ocean views, they removed mangroves
from the shorelines and replaced them with palm trees. Little by little
canals, roads, and buildings displaced native habitats.
The year 1948 marked an even greater change when Congress
authorized the Central and South Florida Project. This involved the
construction of an elaborate system of roads, canals, levees, and water-control
structures stretching throughout South Florida. Constructed by the Army
Corps of Engineers, and sponsored by the Central and Southern Flood
Control District (later redesignated the South Florida Water Management
District), the project purposes were to provide water and flood protection
for urban and agricultural lands, a water supply for Everglades National
Park, the preservation of fish and wildlife habitat, facilitate navigation
and recreation, and the prevention of salt water intrusion. While the
project still provides many of the intended benefits, the alteration
of regional wetland areas, estuaries, and bays combined with increasing
population pressures and changing land uses has significantly degraded
the natural system.
Today 50% of south Florida’s original wetland
areas no longer exist. The numbers of wading birds, such as egrets,
herons, and ibises, have been reduced by 90%. Entire populations of
animals, including the manatee, the Cape Sable seaside sparrow, the
Miami blackheaded snake, the wood stork, and the Florida panther, are
at risk of disappearing. Exotic pest plants such as melaleuca, Brazilian
pepper, and Australian pine have invaded natural areas, choking out
native plants and altering habitats. Massive die-offs of seagrass beds
in Florida Bay have been followed by the extensive losses of wading
birds, fish, shrimp, sponges, and mangroves. These grim indicators warn
of a system under assault and in jeopardy of collapse.