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As presented by Bob Neudel at The National Science Teacher's Association on March 8th, 2007. The Survival of the Everglades.... taking another look at recent global environmental factors!

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"There are no other Everglades in the World. They are, they have always been, never wholly known. Nothing anywhere else is like them: their vast glittering openness, wider than the enormous visible round of the horizon, the racing free saltness and sweetness of their massive winds, under the dazzling blue height of space. They are unique also in the simplicity, the diversity, the related harmony of the forms of life they enclose....It is a river of grass." Douglass. The River of Grass. 1948. In the summer of 2001 I spent three weeks studying the Florida Everglades in search for 'the river of grass'. The pictures below are from this collection as well as several subsequent visits in the "dry season". A presentation of 'In Search of the River of Grass' has been given for the Mohawk Bird Club, The Science Teachers Association of New York State, and the National Science Teachers Association.

Thanks to a 2005 'Woody Rae Sabbatical', this March I will be revisiting the Everglades in the dry season to compare the changes. The Everglades is one of the most delicate and fragile wetland systems in the United States. If the Everglades ecosystems fails, what does that say for our remaining wetlands and biodiversity in our remaining habitats? 

My revisit was to compare the Dry Season to my three week study of the Wet Season. Things never go as planned. With heavy destruction of the glades from the recent Hurricanes --- especially in the Flamingo area,  our better understanding of the effects of global warming and rising costs of the Everglades Forever project, the Everglades survival has possibly never been as threatened.

Margarie Stoneman Douglas wrote that Hurricanes were important for the Everglades survival. They helped control the invasion of tropical species. With the increase of severe hurricanes, tropical storms, and possible warming, more polluted water is being released into the Everglades ecosystem bringing more evasive species into the area than the occasional hurricane may eliminate.  What will the effect be if Hurricanes continue to batter the glades in coming years?

Recommended Reading                                                     Hurricane Notes and Pictures from March Trip 

E1: Heron in Cypress Swamp

The Everglades is the only National Park that's survival depends solely by humans. We control the water flow to imitate the natural Everglades habitat. 

E3:Bald Cypress Cypress in Swamp 

Logging in the late 19th and early 20th century nearly wiped out Bald Cypress that were alive when Columbus set the ocean blue. Corkscrew Swamp is the only area left with the original Bald Cypress. http://www.audubon.org/local/sanctuary/corkscrew/

   

E-2 :The swamps: eerie but full of beauty!

E- 20  The sun setting in the Gulf....

NP1012     Anhinga at Flamingo (Everglades National Park)

Fl217   Anhinga and Painted Turtle: Dingo Darling Wildlife Preserve, Fl.
This quiet and beautiful spot in the wet season. The red mangrove leaves shed in the Fall leaving the area bare. E-mail for info on purchasing this picture.  No study of the Everglades can go without looking at the Florida Alligator. Taken in the Cypress Swamp preserve in the wet season. E-mail for info on purchasing this picture.

E30  Blue Heron Portrait

E31 Alligator early morning warms up for day's adventure.

Classroom teachers contact Bob for information on resources available for classroom study.

 

E0    Slash Pine Prairie

All pictures copyright Bob Neudel Photography.

Recommended Reading

 The Everglades River of Grass 50th Anniversary Edition  by: Marjorie Stoneman Douglass

The Everglades Handbook  by: Thomas E. Lodge

Southwest Florida's Wetland Wilderness  by: Jeff Ripple, Photos by Clyde Butcher

Florida's Unsung Wilderness The Swamps  by: Connie Bransilver & Larry W. Richardson Forward by Jane Goodall

Everglades Wild Guide  by: Official National Park Handbook

Everglades, Buffalo Tiger and the River of Grass, Peter Laurie

Everglades Presentation at National Science Teachers Association, St. Louis, Mo, 2007. Pictures copyright by Bob Neudel Photography. This is intended to be used for Classroom use only. Please contact Bob Neudel for permission if you plan on copying or reproducing. Click if you accept these terms.

 

pics from St. Louis, 3,07

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