Florida wildlife habitat shrinking as state's population nears third-highest in US; urban development combined with rising sea levels threatening state's coastal wildlife, says Center for Biological Diversity

Aimee Bellah

Aimee Bellah

MIAMI , January 2, 2014 (press release) – Florida will soon overtake New York as the third-most populous state in the country, according to the U.S. Census Bureau population estimates released today. The news comes as Florida’s world-famous wildlife continues to struggle against habitat loss, urban sprawl, water withdrawals and other effects of rapid human population growth in recent decades.

“As Florida’s human population growth breaks new records, incredible species like panthers and manatees are dying at record rates,” said Stephanie Feldstein, the Center for Biological Diversity’s Population and Sustainability director. “Florida is a beautiful, biodiversity-rich state, but it has a long history of replacing that beauty with condos and strip malls. If Florida doesn’t get its growth under control, development and concrete are all that will be left.”

Florida’s population doubles every 20 years. Census figures released today show there are currently more than 19.5 million people living in the state (New York has 19.6 million people). The growing population has overrun wildlife habitat in recent decades. In addition to habitat loss, Florida’s coastal wildlife is feeling the squeeze between rising sea levels caused by climate change and development that prevents them from moving inland. A report released earlier this month by the Center found that more than half of Florida’s endangered species are at risk from sea-level rise, including Key deer, the West Indian manatee and five species of nesting turtles.

“Florida’s wildlife faces the double whammy of land lost to development and shorelines lost to rising seas,” said Feldstein. “They’re running out of options for where they can go. Just look at what’s happened to Florida panthers.”

Florida panthers once ranged throughout the southeastern United States, but now survive in a tiny area of South Florida, representing just 5 percent of its former range. The panthers were listed as endangered in 1967 because of habitat destruction and fragmentation through urban sprawl. Large numbers of panthers died as the expanding network of roads connecting Florida’s rapidly growing human population spread throughout its range. In 2012, a record high of 19 panthers were killed by vehicles, and today there are only an estimated 100 to 160 animals left in the wild.

There are a number of steps Florida can take to begin to address these problems, from improving access to family planning and reproductive health to enacting smart growth policies that protect habitat and coastal ecosystems, create room for species to move inland, and embrace energy efficiency.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 625,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

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