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(Click on photo for larger image.)

A mere rainstorm isn’t enough to discourage FWC fisheries
biologist Don Fox from working in Lake Okeechobee to
ensure the lake’s good health. Fox was excited to find this clump of coontail
growing on its own in the lake. Coontail is important to nurturing the
bottom of the food chain that makes the lake a world-class
fishery.
(FWC photo by Patricia Behnke)
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FWC builds island habitats from Lake
Okeechobee muck
October 1, 2008
Contact: Patricia Behnke, 850-251-2130
A Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission (FWC) biologist has found uses for the muck that
workers scraped from the Lake Okeechobee lake bed during the
recent drought.
Don Fox, who fights a relentless battle tending
to the lake’s health, has discovered the muck is suitable for
constructing new islands in the lake. He said a variety of
plants grow well on the man-made islands; and wildlife - such as
turkeys, turtles, mammals and, in one case, a covey of quail -
has taken up residence on them.
“The animals are finding food and cover they
need on the islands,” Fox said. “This is a kind of laboratory.
We see what grows well here, and we can transplant it to other
small islands we’ve made.”
Also, a nearby farmer covered some land with the
muck and found it makes an excellent peat for South
Florida’s sandy soil.
“He’s growing a healthy crop of black-eyed
peas,” Fox said.
In the past, restoring ailing lakes required
removing the muck and finding a spoil site to put it. Muck is
not healthy habitat for plants or fish when it’s spread over a
lake bottom, but once it’s dried out, it can support life.
Meanwhile, stripping away the layer of muck on
the lake bed exposes sand and seeds that germinate and establish
the healthy plant life that’s a crucial component of the food
chain that nurtures a world-class fishery and other nature-based
recreation.
FWC Chairman Rodney Barreto said folding the
island-building project into the lake-restoration project
reflects the innovative approach it will take to maintain the
natural character of Florida over the next half-century.
“The FWC’s new report, ‘Wildlife 2060: What’s at
stake for Florida?’ explains the pressures Florida’s natural
systems will be under during the next 50 years as the state’s
population doubles to 36 million,” Barreto said. “We will have
to be diligent and creative and develop alternative protection
and management ideas, because we can expect development to take
over wilderness and wetland habitats equal to the entire land
area of Vermont.”
The recent rains from tropical storms have
brought water levels back up on Lake Okeechobee, and with that,
Fox is pleased to see that plants, such as the native submerged
plant coontail, is coming back in healthy, sustainable amounts.
“This is good stuff,” Fox said.
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