I don't understand your point? Freddy the Alligator?? The Everglades *IS* Very Important.
Friends of the Everglades was started by Majory Stoneman Douglas who fought to save the Everglades. She wrote in 1947, The River of Grass: "There is no another one like it in the whole world." ... "Save the Everglades, you save the Planet."
www.everglades.org
Friends strives to protect and restore the Greater Kissimmee-Okeechobee-Everglades Ecosystem.Ê Our primary tools are legal advocacy and education.
In this site, you will find information on the Florida Everglades and on how you can help us all win the fight to protect one of the world's unique natural treasures.
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Stretching south from the vast 700 square mile Lake Okeechobee, nourished by the rain soaked Kissimmee River Basin, the Everglades is a wide slow moving river of marsh and sawgrass covering some 4,500 square miles, flowing quietly, peacefully, towards the mangrove estuaries of the Gulf of Mexico.
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The Everglades was formed over thousands of years by this seasonal cycle of pulsing water. Fish, moving freely, flourishing in the vast wet summer marshes are herded into deeper pools as the water recedes in the dry season. Birds, alligators, raccoons, and other mammals gather to these pools to feed on fish and frogs and other reptiles. The shallowing water provides cover and food for the many colonies of nesting wading birds that have migrated from their northern enclaves - Wood storks, Herons, Sandhill Cranes, Great White Egrets and Ibis gather, feed and raise their young.
Thousands of species of plants, birds, animals, fish and reptiles make their home in the Everglades. That home is under siege. Fifty years of draining and diking, digging and building have destroyed over half of the historic Everglades. The remnants are in peril despite a much heralded 8 billion dollar restoration plan. Shortcuts are being taken and compromises are being made. Delay and apathy are becoming its enemies. The result is that none of the dozens of threatened and endangered species have, or are likely to, make any progress soon - or soon enough.
http://www.everglades.org/washingtonpost_com%20A%20Rescue%20Plan,%20Bold%20and%20Uncertain.htmA Rescue Plan, Bold and Uncertain
Scientists, Federal Officials Question Project's Benefits for Ailing Ecosystem
By Michael Grunwald
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 23, 2002; Page A01
First of four articles
President Bill Clinton and Gov. Jeb Bush met in the Oval Office on Dec. 11, 2000, to launch a $7.8 billion effort to revive the Florida Everglades. Vice President Al Gore, the plan's leading White House advocate, stayed home to watch CNN. That morning, the Supreme Court was hearing final arguments in the Florida vote-count case pitting him against Bush's brother George.
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But the Everglades is unique. That's why the national park, covering 40 percent of the remaining Everglades, was the first established for biology rather than scenery. That's why the United Nations designated it a World Heritage Site and an International Biosphere Reserve.
For a subtropical marsh, the Everglades is unusually flat, unusually wet and unusually low in nutrients. Those characteristics produced its singular biodiversity, from the algae mats at the bottom of its food chain to the storks, herons and other wading birds the 19th-century naturalist John James Audubon observed "in such numbers to actually block out the light of the sun." The park is the only place on Earth where alligators and crocodiles live side by side; President Bush has joked that Congress should study its example.
another link from www.everglades.org :
"Water quantity and quality flowing through the Everglades affect not only the wildlife and habitats of the protected natural Everglades, but also influence urban water supplies, flood protection, coastal estuaries, tourism, and even sport and commercial fisheries. The thousands of migratory birds who take up temporary residence in the Everglades come from as far away as Canada and South America. The State should have strengthened and to sped up protection for the endangered natural Everglades, simultaneously reducing the costs that all Florida citizens must now pay to continue to subsidize real estate speculators and the sugar industry."