Everglades Headwaters Conservation Partnership: Final Environmental Assessment for the Establishment of the Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge and Conservation Area
Part of the Avon Park AFR Environmental Assessments and Management Plans project
Author(s): U.S. Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service
Year: 2012
Summary
The Kissimmee River Basin in south-central Florida is a unique and biologically diverse landscape that is home to rare and unique habitats and wildlife found nowhere else, and an agricultural way of life that is slowly disappearing. With Florida’s population expected to double to 36 million from 2010 to 2060 (Zwick and Carr 2006) and many major development projects in the works, the time is now to conserve what is left. In 2010, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) helped initiate discussions to form the Greater Everglades Partnership Initiative with a broad array of partners to begin collaborating on the best and most cost-effective ways to achieve conservation across the landscape. This partnership approach is being advanced as a means to collaboratively conserve wildlife and habitats, to protect corridors linking established conservation lands, and to conserve a working cattle ranching landscape and heritage. The Service will contribute and collaborate with a long list of current agencies and organizations already working to conserve this landscape by establishing a new national wildlife refuge and conservation area.
Cite this Record
Everglades Headwaters Conservation Partnership: Final Environmental Assessment for the Establishment of the Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge and Conservation Area. U.S. Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service. Southeast Region . Atlanta, Georgia. 2012 ( tDAR id: 377837) ; doi:10.6067/XCV87W6D39
This Resource is Part of the Following Collections
Keywords
Culture
Euroamerican
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Historic
Site Type
Agricultural Field or Field Feature
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Agricultural or Herding
Investigation Types
Environment Research
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Ethnohistoric Research
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Heritage Management
Spatial Coverage
min long: -81.598; min lat: 27.401 ; max long: -80.997; max lat: 27.946 ;
Individual & Institutional Roles
Contact(s): Alison Rubio; James Wilde
Prepared By(s): U.S. Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service
File Information
Name | Size | Creation Date | Date Uploaded | Access | |
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final-environmental-assessment.pdf | 12.04mb | Sep 12, 2012 11:31:50 AM | Public |