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Map showing location of Everglades National Park. |
Early conservationists recognized the Everglades as a unique treasure. In 1928, Ernest F. Coe lobbied for the creation of a national park within the lower Everglades and later that year, legislation to create Everglades National Park (ENP) was introduced. Marjory Stoneman Douglas was part of the committee that helped to decide areas to include for the park. Later, in 1947, she would write "The Everglades: River of Grass", which helped to bring the Everglades to public attention.
At about the same time that Everglades National Park was established (1947), hurricane rains and flooding in the northern Everglades caused the state of Florida to ask for help from the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers. This resulted in the Central and Southern Florida (C&SF) Project and the construction of about 1,000 miles of canals, levees, gates, dams and pump stations. While the C&SF Project was successful with providing flood control, the natural flow of water to the Everglades was greatly affected.
Trivia Question: Where is the only place in the world that alligators and crocodiles co-exist?
Everglades National Park |
Everglades National Park lies at the southern tip of Florida. The Parks 1.5-million acres contain many distinct ecosystems including sawgrass prairies, pinelands, hammocks, cypress swamps, mangroves, saltwater marshes and Florida Bay. The highest point in the Everglades is 8 feet above sea level. A gradual gradient makes for the southern movement of shallow waters toward the Gulf of Mexico.
For more information, please visit the Everglades National Park website.
Travel along with us toward Flamingo, located at the parks southern end. Our stops along the northern section of the main park road will take you through the park entrance, The Anhinga Trail, Long Pine Key, The Pa-hay-okee Overlook Trail, and Mahogany Hammock.
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Map showing locations of stops along the northern section of the main park road in Everglades National Park. The colors show the various ecosystems within the Everglades. |
Welcome to Everglades National Park |
Near the beginning of the main park road through Everglades National Park, along the east and west sides, sunbeams shine through heavy clouds onto the freshwater marl prairie. Sawgrass covers this open, flat prairie. It is the most dominant plant in the Everglades "River of Grass".
Sawgrass is a member of the sedge family and is not really a grass. It is named for the rows of sharp teeth that run along each edge and down the central spine. If touched in the wrong direction, sawgrass can cut.
The 1/2-mile Anhinga loop Trail begins at a short paved area, which leads to an elevated boardwalk. The boardwalk winds through a sawgrass marsh and Taylor Slough, which resembles a pond in some areas. The word "slough" (pronounced "slew") is used to describe Everglades areas where there is slightly, deeper water than in the surrounding marshes and where a slow current is present.
Which bird's feathers are more like fur than feathers?
Ans: Anhinga's! |
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Looking from the Anhinga Trail boardwalk over the ponded water in Taylor Slough. The aquatic plant spatterdock lies on the pond surface, small tree islands provide a roosting spot for cormorants, and sawgrass surrounds the pond. |
Anhinga |
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As if on cue, near the beginning of the Anhinga Trail a female anhinga roosts in the trees. Females are easy to identify as their neck and chest feathers are much lighter in color than the male. Distinguishing traits of an anhinga include a long tail, white wing feathers and a pointed beak that it uses to spear food.
Anhingas prefer freshwater areas and are but one of the common water birds found in Everglades National Park. Other commonly seen water birds include cormorants, ibises, roseate spoonbills, and pelicans, as well as many heron and egret species.
Wading birds mostly forage in shallow waters. Therefore, the draining of wetlands limits foraging habitat. Due to drainage of the Everglades, wading bird populations have been drastically reduced.
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A Bird's Eye View of Taylor Slough |
Spatterdock |
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Budding spatterdocks were seen floating atop the Taylor Slough waters. Spatterdock is a common freshwater plant of Florida. Its heart-shaped, large leaves may be wide or narrow and generally have wavy edges. |
Tree Islands |
Looking east from Anhinga Trail, over Taylor Slough sawgrass marsh. Tree islands are seen in the background. Tree islands form on depressions in limestone bedrock that have filled with peat soils to elevations higher than surrounding marshes. These islands provide habitat for many animals including birds, mammals and alligators. |
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We observed many alligators by the ponded slough waters near the Anhinga Trail. Here an alligator lies on a small patch of elevated land and another alligator lies in the grassy waters-edge of Taylor Slough. |
Alligators are cold-blooded animals. Therefore, their body temperatures adjust to surrounding temperatures. When cold, they may become inactive like these alligators and will search for a sunny area or dig down into the mud under water. Alligators are generally more active when the weather is warm.
Alligator at Anhinga Trail courtesy of Brennan Mulrooney
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Observed from the safety of the Anhinga Trail boardwalk, this alligator hides partially submerged in the grassy waters-edge of Taylor Slough. Alligators are patient predators. Their diet can include waterbirds, fish, turtles, small mammals and other alligators. |
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Can you find the alligator in this picture? |
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Hint: It is resting on a tree island in the Taylor Slough ponded area.
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A panoramic view of the Long Pine Key pine forest surrounding a small lake. [larger image] |
Long Pine Key in Everglades National Park contains a pine forest community indicative of the original pine ("fire") forests of Florida. The forest contains slash pines with an understory of saw palmettos, wildflowers and ferns.
Plants that grow in the pinelands must be resistant to fire as areas such as these are maintained by fire. Fires are beneficial to the pines as young pine seedlings require lots of sunlight to survive, and the fires destroy hardwood competitors. When fires occur, hardwood seedlings and other understory plants are affected, while the thick bark of the pine resists fire damage. Without fires, hardwoods would eventually overshadow the pines and a hardwood hammock would emerge.
Butterfly pea vine |
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A butterfly pea vine flowering in the sandy soils of Long Pine Key. These vines usually bloom in all but the winter season and are common in open pinelands. |
Pa-hay-okee Overlook Trail |
The Pa-hay-okee (Indian word for "grassy waters") Overlook Trail consists of a short boardwalk trail, which ends at an observation tower. From the tower, visitors can take-in an incredible view of the endless grassy waters, which make up the "River of Grass", and a large cypress dome.
Looking from the Pa-hay-okee Overlook Trail observation tower, out across the vast expanse of grassy waters. A large cypress dome is seen in the distance. |
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Did you know? Cypress domes are cypress swamps that when viewed from a distance have a dome-like appearance with the tallest trees near the center. Usually, waters in cypress domes are deeper near the center, which is why the tallest trees grow there.
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Freshwater snails |
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Looking down from the Pa-hay-okee boardwalk, snail shells litter the grassy waters surface. Freshwater snails found within the Everglades include the Florida apple snail and the Seminole rams-horn. Both the apple snail and the rams-horn are found in areas that are flooded for much of the year, however the rams-horn can also be found in areas with shorter hydroperiods.
The snail kite is an endangered bird of prey that feeds almost exclusively on apple snails. As the apple snail requires habitats with extended periods of inundation, when water delivery to Everglades National Park is delayed the snail population is affected thus affecting the dwindling numbers of snail kites.
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Fungus |
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Looking down from the Pa-hay-okee boardwalk, a bright orange fungus grows on a dead branch lying atop the "River of Grass". |
The 1/2-mile Mahogany Hammock boardwalk winds from sawgrass on lower ground into an elevated mahogany hammock.
Below, south of the Mahogany Hammock Trail, freshwater marl prairie is seen along the east and west sides of the main park road. Freshwater marl prairie is a type of marsh that is flooded about 3 to 7 months a year. Large expanses of freshwater marl prairie are found within Everglades National Park.
Related SOFIA Information
Below we have listed science projects and publications for studies that are being conducted, or have been conducted, in the area of Everglades National Park. Follow these links to read about each project and to see project-related publications and data.
Science Projects:
Related Publications:
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