Title: Restoring the Florida Everglades
1Restoring the Florida Everglades
Chris Minor
2Introduction to the Watershed
3History
- Until late 1800s a large chain of wetland
- Covered 8.9 million acres
- 4 million acres River of Grass
- High diversity of flora and fauna
- Water moved slowly through the system, extending
flows from season to season.
4History Cont.
- Late 1880s efforts began to drain south Florida
- Considered necessary for safety and commerce
5Today
- 1000 miles of canals
- 720 miles of levees
- Controlled by 16 pump stations
- 200 gates/other water control structures
6Today Cont.
- ½ of Everglades lost to agribusiness and urban
development - 100 mi. long Kissimmee River has been converted
into a 50 mile long canal - Flow to the Everglades reduced by 70. An average
of 1.7 billion gallons of water is discharged to
the ocean every day. - The littoral marsh in Lake Okeechobee suffers
from high water being backed to meet the high
demand. -
7Today Cont.
- 1 million acres posted with health advisory due
to contamination - Florida Bay suffers from a lack of freshwater
causing hypersaline conditions, a sever decline
of seagrasses and algal blooms - All estuaries have suffered impacts to their
ecological structure
8Whats causing the problem?
9Water Management Issues
- Top threat to the Everglades ecosystem
- Quality- Primarily agricultural runoff
- Quantity and Timing- Wet and dry seasons altered
- Distribution- Decrease in number of acreage
inundated - 2/3 of the area depends on the rain received by
1/3 of the original watershed
10Introduction of Invasive/Exotic Species
- Hydrilla
- (Hydrilla verticillata)
- Water Hyacinth
- (Echlornia crassipies)
11Agriculture
- EAA-505,000 acres dedicated to agriculture
- The most productive area in the state
- 80 in sugarcane and 20 vegetables, rice and sod
- Provides 40 of the nations winter vegetable and
25 of the nations sugar - Largest single source of phosphorus to the
everglades providing 47 of the historical load - Each year 1.8 million tons of fertilizer applied
costing 250 million for 3 billion worth of crops
12So what!
.
- High levels of phosphorus causes a shift in algae
species - Sawgrass to cattails
- Decline in wading birds
13Human Population Increase
- Currently 6 million people in South Florida
- 7 of 10 fastest growing metropolitan areas in the
country - Daily population increase of 900 residents
- 20-25 years expected to reach 12 million
14So what!
- For 900 people 200,000 gallons of water are
needed - Added square miles of building and paving reduce
rainwater penetration into aquifers - Obviously- it alters the land, changes the water
flow and creates more runoff
15Review
- High demands for water from agriculture and human
population increase - Economic value of agriculture
- Scope of exotic species
16Now what?
17The Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan
(CERP)
- Army Corp of Engineers in 1999
- Endeavors to restore, protect, and preserve the
South Florida ecosystem - Principles that guide the plan include
- -Meeting restoration, preservation, and
protection requirements while providing for
the region's other water-related needs - -Incorporating best-available science and
independent scientific review - -Openly including and engaging stakeholders
Ensuring full partnership with federal, tribal,
state and local agencies and taking their views
into full consideration and - -Creating a flexible plan that is based on
adaptive assessment and recognizing that
modifications will be made in the future based on
new information.
18Land Acquisition
- The South Florida Water management District,
as the Non-Federal Sponsor of the Comprehensive
Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP), is charged
with the responsibility of acquiring the real
estate needed for the construction, monitoring
and operation of the CERP projects. The CERP
projects are estimated to cost 7.8 billion of
which 2.2 billion is allocated to the
acquisition of lands (in October 1999 dollars).
19CERP Concept
- To capture and store freshwater currently
discharged to the ocean and use it during the dry
season to replicate natural flow - This goal is to be achieved through the removal
of 240 miles of levees and canals, and the
building a network of reservoirs, underground
storage wells, and pumping stations that capture
water for redistribution. - Responsibilities for implementing CERP are shared
between the Army Corps of Engineers and the South
Florida Water Management District.
20CERP
- First cost estimate is 7.8 billion.
- Annual operation and maintenance cost, including
monitoring and management is estimated at 182
million - Implementation continued through 2038, the half
way point is 2010
21CERP
- Realize complete recover is not possible
- There have been substantial and irreversible
reductions in the spatial extent of the wetlands
system (including an approximate 50 percent
reduction in the Everglades) and in the total
water storage, timing, and flow capacities of the
systems, as well as well as permanent impacts
from rising sea levels, establishment of exotic
plants and animals, subsidence, and losses of
organic soils. - There is a significant lack of pre-drainage
quantitative, qualitative, and ecological data
available to contrast and compare efforts.
22CERP
Overall objective is to create a new
Everglades, one that will be different from
previous systems and will be substantially
healthier than the current system.
The restoration effort aims to restore a
sustainable ecosystem that preserves the
properties of South Floridas systems and
supports agriculture, fishery, tourist-based
economics and a Highly quality of urban life.
23Goals of CERP
- Enhance ecologic values through improving the
total spatial extent of natural areas improving
habitat and functional quality and improving
native plant and animal species abundance and
diversity. - Enhance economic values and social well being
through increasing availability of fresh water
(agricultural/municipal and industrial) reducing
flood damage (agricultural/urban) providing
recreational and navigation opportunities and
protecting cultural and archeological resources
and values.
24Projects of the CERP
25Restoration
- A daunting task
- 18,000 square miles
- The most ambitious ecological restoration ever
attempted - 55 federal, state and county agencies as well as
two Native American tribal councils
26Restore Natural Flow
- Somewhat unknown after all still need to provide
water for agriculture and residents - Perhaps a system of aquifer storage and recovery
(ASR) the aquifer storage and recov-ery plan
proposes drilling more than 300wells in South
Florida that would funnel up to 1.7 billion
gallons of a day into underground aquifers to be
stored and pumped out as needed. - Will it work?
27Restore Natural Flow Cont.
- Sawgrass ridges running parallel and open-water
sloughs, dotted with higher tree islands were
landform the contributed directly to the
historical flow. - Degradation of these areas in association with
canals, levees and roads seem irreversible
28Improving Water Quality
- Everglades Forever Act of 1994 significantly
changed business in the EAA - The Act ensures 320 million will go from the
sugar industry to restoration of lands by 2014 - Water flow to the Everglades will be increased by
28 through re-routing of rivers and release of
stored water - 40,000 acres of EAA lands will be converted into
an artificial filtering marsh to help cleans the
water before it leaves the area - By 2006 water runoff will be 10 times as pure as
rainwater
29Improving Water Quality - BMP
- Everglade Best Management Program (BMP)
- Requires the EAA to achieve a 25 reduction in
total phosphorus discharge to the everglades. - BMPs include covering crops to reduce wind and
water erosion, spread soil removed from canals to
fields, laser level fields, modify pump
practices, vegetation along banks, minimize
fertilizer application, crop rotation, growing
rice during the summer allowing higher water
tables, use vegetable drainage water in sugarcane
fields and retention of drainage on-farm
30BMP Continued
- Financial incentives are provided to grower who
exceed the 25 minimum.
31Improving Water Quality - Storm Water Treatment
Areas
- Advanced treatment technologies consisting of
47,250 acres of synthetic wetlands built to
remove phosphorus - These areas will receive on average 1.4 million
acre-feet year of stormwater runoff from the EAA - The natural system was nutrient poor with less
than 10ppb concentrations of phosphorus so
several strategies have been developed to
increase the phosphorus uptake (Direct filter,
membrane filters, dissolved air filtration,
neutralizing chemicals
32Improving Water Quality - Aquifer Storage and
Recovery
- Will allow for storage of water during the wet
season to be used in the dry season which will
decrease the loss of flow to the ocean and
reducing water loss to the everglades
33Restoration Program in the Kissimee River Basin
- Revitalize habitat for 320 wildlife species
- Federal and state government cost sharing
379,000 million, 15 year project to recharge the
river and restore the meandering bend that were
channelized in the 1960s
34Restoration Program in the Florida Bay
- Nearly 6 million supported over 70 research
projects designed to assist restoration efforts - Thorough study will provide knowledge necessary
to help restore the estuary
35Restoration in the East Everglades
- The Everglades Protection and Expansion Act added
107,600 acres of critical habitat in Shark Slough
added to Everglades national park. - Directed the ACE to modify water management
structures to allow for sheet flow of water.
36Then and Now
37Achieving Progress
- The ultimate success of CERP will be a reflection
of its implementation over - more than 30 years. Successful implementation
will require a well-coordinated - strategy that recognizes, first and foremost,
that ecosystem restoration is the - overarching objective. CERP will begin to
reverse, in a relatively short time, - the pattern of ecological degradation that has
been occurring in the natural - system for many decades.
- Implementation also will be guided by a set of
principles - Utilization of interdisciplinary and interagency
teams - Incorporation of outreach and public involvement
- Maintenance of regional system focus
- Integration with ongoing and future projects
- Integrated contingency planning
- Consideration of water quality needs
- Plan evaluation through adaptive assessment
- Addressing of uncertainties
- Assurances to water users
- Development and refinement of models and tools
38Future
- The Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan
will revitalize the ecosystem, while providing
future fresh water supplies for the people and
farms of the region, too. It is considered the
world's largest such project. - But its success is up to all of us citizens
across the nation and state from the public, and
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Department
of Interior, the South Florida Water Management
District and other agencies. Both input and
support will be required over the coming decades
as we construct this ambitious ecological
restoration effort. - Twenty years from now, today's children should
have the opportunity as adults to visit this
majestic and captivating ecosystem and see its
expansive sawgrass marshes and towering blue
skies. The Comprehensive Everglades Restoration
Plan will ensure the River of Grass will be a
healthier place than it is today, and one which
will remain strong and vital in the future. We
hope the information presented in this web site
will help explain the problems of the Everglades
and what we are doing to restore this national
treasure.