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Sperm bank established to cryopreserve (freeze-store) semen collected from free-ranging male panthers.



Addition to Big Cypress National Preserve authorized.


see map
Florida legislature passes the Florida Panther Bill establishing the Panther Research and Management Trust Fund.

Florida Panther Technical Advisory Council established by the state legislature to advise the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission.
Florida human population reaches 9.7 million, almost double 1960 census.

First Florida panther recovery plan.

panther recovery planThe objective of the Recovery Plan is "to prevent the extinction and to re-establish viable populations of the Florida panther in as much of the former range as feasible."
more information on recovery plan
Beginning of radiotelemetry investigations of panthers in Fakahatchee Strand State Preserve.

Nine-month old male with radio collar- Jayde Roof

see a panther vet exam

The state's schoolchildren choose the Florida panther as the official state animal.

1981
1984
Florida Panther Recovery Plan revised and updated. The plan's objective is to achieve three viable self-sustaining populations within the panther's historic range; to achieve this goal at least two additional populations will have to be reestablished.
more information on recovery plan
First north Florida reintroduction study. Seven mountain lions (Puma concolor stanleyana) were captured in west Texas and released in the area of the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge/Osceola National Forest. The mountain lions were used as surrogates to evaluate the feasibility of re-establishing Florida panthers in the area.
more information on reintroduction
Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge (24,000 acres) established.
see map
burn - Larry Richardson
Above: Controlled burn, one of the techniques used to increase forage for deer in the Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge.


Florida Panther Viability Analysis and Species Survival Plan prepared by the Captive Breeding Specialist Group predicts that the Florida panther population will decline by 6-10 percent each year, and that each generation will experience a 3-7 percent loss of genetic diversity. Management intervention would be necessary.



The Corkscrew Regional Ecosystem Watershed (CREW Trust), comprised of local, state, and federal government representatives, and agriculture, conservation, and business interests, is formed to protect 56,000 acres in southeast Lee and northwest Collier counties.
see map
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On to 1990's
 

 


1983
1985
Panther Crossing Speed Limit - Paula SeamonSpeed limits reduced to 45 mph at night on SR 84 and SR 29.

Predator-prey studies begun to gather information on the relationship between panthers and deer herds in the Big Cypress National Preserve.
1982

Florida Panther Interagency Committee established (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission, National Park Service, and Florida Department of Environmental Protection).


Conversion of Alligator Alley to Interstate 75 begun, with wildlife underpasses included in the highway design.

RealVideo on Wildlife Crossings

Sign surveys for panthers at Fisheating Creek, Glades County, and Corkscrew Swamp, Collier County. Panther sign (scat, scratches, tracks, and scrapes) was encountered regularly at Fisheating Creek and sporadically at Corkscrew Swamp (Roof and Maehr 1988).
1986
RealVideo 28.8 56 28.8
1988
1988-1989
1989
References Threats Habitat Natural History site map Home Page Conservation Handbook home page

 

download RealPlayer G2 see vet exam of panther