Wading Birds Doing Well in Everglades

wood-storkWoods storks are doing well in Everglades National Park recently.  The South Florida Water Management district reports that for 2009, populations of the wood stork and other wading birds are soaring.  There was more than a 1000 % increase in wood stork nests over the year 2008.

A total of 6,500 wood stork nests were recorded in Everglades National Park last year, and this represents a 200 % increase over the average of the past decade.  Everglades National Park is home to thousands of birds, and bird watchers come from all over the world to spot species and take pictures.  Overall, Everglades National Park is home to 15, 400 wading bird nests, which is the largest number since 1941!

Why are wading birds doing so well?  Scientists point to recent droughts, which actually kill off predators of wading birds, which are large fish.  And they allow small fish and crayfish populations to increase.  And that’s what wading birds eat.

Everglades National Park

Everglades National Park

Everglades National Park

Like No Other

No exaggeration, there really is no other place in the world like the Everglades. Always a little mysterious but never completely off the radar of our national consciousness, Everglades National Park contains some of the most exotic wild animals and plantlife in our part of the world, living together in a very unusual ecosystem. There are dozens of endangered species here, and the chance to see them in their natural habitat is one of the major drawing points of this park. Lurking in the swamps of the Everglades are rareties such as:

  • American Crocodiles
  • the Florida Panther
  • the southern bald eagle
  • the West Indian manatee
  • the leatherback turtle
  • and the swallowtail butterfly

Forget what you’ve seen on CSI Miami, that’s just the face of the Everglades. When you visit the Park, you’ll see that there’s so much more: a strange exotic feeling you get slowly moving through the flat river trails, catching glimpses of quiet native animals who manage to survive in the heat, the humidity, the watery knots of trails that make up Everglades Park.

The Park

Everglades National Park is actually one huge river moving so gradually you can hardly see movement at all. Imagine a river that’s forty miles wide, hardly two feet deep, and teeming with life and you’ve got the Everglades. The Park protects 1.5 million acres, which represents only about one-fifth of the total Everglades wilderness, with the rest succumbing to development, agriculture, and general misuse, sadly. To pile insult on top of injury, Everglades serve as the drainage basin for Southern Florida (think agricultural pesticides, fertilizers, Miami, industrial plants…), existing side by side in close inter-connetivity with surrounding regions. Unfortunately, this means that even though the Park protects what’s inside its borders, it can’t stop pollutants from entereing in the waters that drain from parts north. Consequently, native wildlife counts have decreased lately. That’s not to say it’s a ghost town…visit and you’ll see tiny tree frogs, orchids, lizards, and if you’re lucky you’ll see one of the endangered species mentioned earlier. Although you may not be able to pinpoint exactly what excites you about the Everglades and the subtle slow-moving beauty they bring, you’ll never forget it, and you’ll certainly be entranced while you’re there, and you may even want to go back again and again.

Flight to Key West

Directions to Everglades National Park

The Entrances

Everglades National Park has three entrances from land and one main entrance area with facilities from the water. These are:

Each of these entrances and visitor centers offers a different angle on the Everglades, and depending on where you’re driving from, and what you plan to do, each one offers different activities as well.

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