By: Trimmel Gomes
As the Sunshine State grapples with rising
temperatures and escalating weather events such as hurricanes, a new study
sheds light on the pivotal role of Florida's Wildlife Corridor in mitigating
the effects of climate change coupled with a surge of new residents.
The report is trumpeted as a first-of-its-kind study showcasing how the 18
million acres of the Wildlife Corridor, which runs throughout the entire state,
ease the worst impact of climate change. It paints a picture of investing in
resources supporting cohabitation to be mutually beneficial with nature and the
economic growth coming from people who flock to the state to enjoy it.
Colin Polsky, professor and founding director of the School of Environmental,
Coastal and Ocean Sustainability at Florida Atlantic University, and the
study's lead author, said the corridor benefits the state.
"It's an attempt to welcome the 1,000 people a day approximately who move
to Florida, but to do so in a way that allows for the wildlife to continue to
thrive," Polsky explained.
About 10 million of the 18 million acres of corridor are permanently conserved.
The report calls on state leaders to keep working on investing the remaining 8
million. In March, the governor and Cabinet touted the state's largest investment in
decades, a 25,000-acre acquisition within the Caloosahatchee-Big Cypress
Corridor.
Joshua Daskin, project manager and director of conservation at the Archbold
Biological Station, said since the corridor effort was steering billions of
dollars toward land conservation in the state, the report's focus is on showing
the science behind it all.
"Climate resilience is one area in which land conservation can help both
nature and people," Daskin pointed out. "But no one had assembled the
state of the science for all of the ways that climate resilience can be
impacted by land conservation."
The report shows 24% of all Florida properties have a more than one in four
chance of being affected by flooding in the next 30 years. To combat it, one
solution is to keep floodplains undeveloped. The corridors have 10 million
acres of floodplain. The report also recommends mixed-use development to
minimize habitat fragmentation and keep working lands in production.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service. Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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