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current plan is that its flexibility allows for efficient and successive opportunities to
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make further improvements as we refine our plans and obtain new information.
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The focus of the recommended Comprehensive Plan has been on recovering
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the defining ecological features of the original Everglades and other south Florida
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ecosystems. What made these ecosystems unique was their topographic flatness and
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expansiveness, and that they formed hydrologically integrated systems from
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boundary to boundary. What this means in a healthy ecosystem is that water
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patterns in one part of the system could be used to predict the patterns throughout
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the system. Animals living in the Everglades would “read” the water patterns, and
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“know” where to go to find the food and water that they needed for successful
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reproduction and survival under a range of natural conditions. It was the
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combination of connectivity and space that created the range of habitats needed for
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the diversity of plants and animals. The construction of the many levees and dikes
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designed to compartmentalize the Everglades and separate Lake Okeechobee from
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its natural overflow, and the canals that drained water to the coast, disrupted these
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natural patterns, and destroyed the ability of many animals to find the dependable
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habitat needed for their survival at the right time.
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The recommended Comprehensive Plan, by removing over 240 miles of
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internal levees in the Everglades, and approaching recovery of the natural volume
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of water in the remaining wetlands, will restore these essential defining features of
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the pre-drainage wetlands over large portions of the remaining system. The plan
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also includes water storage and water quality treatment areas that will improve
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water quality conditions in the south Florida ecosystem. In response to this
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substantial improvement, the characteristic animals of these ecosystems will show
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dramatic and positive responses. At all levels in the aquatic food chains, the
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numbers of such animals as crayfish, minnows, sunfish, frogs, alligators, herons,
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ibis, and otters, will markedly increase. Equally important, animals will respond to
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the recovery of more natural water patterns by returning to their traditional
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distribution patterns.
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The recommended Comprehensive Plan will support the return of the large
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nesting “rookeries” of wading birds to Everglades National Park, and the recovery of
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several endangered species to more certain and optimistic futures. Wading birds,
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e.g., herons, egrets, ibis and storks, are symbolic of the overall health of the
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Everglades. As recently as the 1950s and 1960s, large “super colonies” of nesting
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waders remained in the park; none have been there since. Wading birds, perhaps
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Summary
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Final Feasibility Report and PEIS April 1999
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xii
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more than any other animal, assess the quality of habitats over the entire basin of
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south Florida wetlands, before making “decisions” about where and when, or even
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whether, to nest. The recovery of the super colonies will be a sure sign that the
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entire ecosystem has made substantial progress towards recovery. Of the
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endangered species, the wood stork, snail kite, Cape Sable seaside sparrow, and
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American crocodile, among others, will benefit and increase. Undoubtedly,
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implementation of the recommended Comprehensive Plan will once again allow us
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to witness what is now only a fading memory of the former abundance of wildlife in
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the Everglades.
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It is important to understand that the “restored” Everglades of the future will
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be different from any version of the Everglades that has existed in the past. While it
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certainly will be vastly superior to the current ecosystem, it will not completely
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match the pre-drainage system. This is not possible, in light of the irreversible
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physical changes that have made to the ecosystem. It will be an Everglades that is
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smaller and somewhat differently arranged than the historic ecosystem. But it will
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be a successfully restored Everglades, because it will have recovered those
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hydrological and biological patterns which defined the original Everglades, and
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which made it unique among the world’s wetland systems. It will become a place
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that kindles the wildness and richness of the former Everglades.
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Lake Okeechobee will once again become a healthy lake. The littoral and
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pelagic zones within the lake, essential to the lake’s commercial and recreational
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fishery and other aquatic species, will be greatly enhanced by the water levels
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projected in the recommended Comprehensive Plan. Water quality will also be
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improved significantly. The lake provides huge regional benefits to wildlife,
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including waterfowl, other birds, and mammals.
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The Comprehensive Plan provides major benefits to the Caloosahatchee and
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St. Lucie estuaries, and Lake Worth Lagoon. The plan eliminates almost all the
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damaging fresh water releases to the Caloosahatchee and most detrimental releases
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to the St. Lucie. The plan makes substantial improvements to Lake Worth Lagoon.
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As a result, grassbeds and other submerged aquatic vegetation will benefit and thus
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provide abundant favorable habitat for the many aquatic species that depend on
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these areas for food, shelter, and breeding grounds, thereby enhancing the
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productivity and economic viability of estuarine fisheries. The recommended
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Comprehensive Plan also includes several water storage and treatment areas to
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improve water quality conditions in the Indian River Lagoon and the St. Lucie and
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Caloosahatchee estuarine systems.
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The recommended Comprehensive Plan makes improvements in fresh water
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deliveries to Florida and Biscayne bays. These bays will benefit from more natural
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water deliveries. Appropriate fresh water regimes will result in substantial
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improvements in aquatic and semi-aquatic habitats; fish and wildlife will respond
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Summary
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Final Feasibility Report and PEIS April 1999
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xiii
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favorably to these beneficial changes. Mangroves, coastal marshes, and seagrass
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beds interacting together to produce food, shelter, and breeding and nursery
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grounds will support more balanced, productive fish, shellfish, and wildlife
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communities.
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South Florida does not have to follow the fate of some states that suffer
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severe water shortages, creating tension between natural resource protection and
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water supply. The recommended Comprehensive Plan expands the storage
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capability of the C&SF Project, enabling the system to better meet ecosystem and
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urban water supply needs in the future. Frequency of water restrictions expected
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with the recommended Comprehensive Plan are greatly reduced compared to the
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Without Plan Condition. This will be accomplished by more effectively providing
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adequate flows from the regional system to recharge the surficial aquifer. This will
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help offset withdrawals from public water supply wellfields and other users in the
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urbanized Lower East Coast Region. Such recharge also protects the surficial
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aquifer from saltwater intrusion, allowing it to remain a productive source of fresh
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water in the future.
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The recommended Comprehensive Plan will significantly increase the
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capability to supply water from the regional system to agricultural users. This will
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provide better protection from economically harmful water supply cutbacks and
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