The Importance Of The Florida Everglades Ecosystem

Words: 606
Pages: 3

The Florida Everglades is very important for our ecosystem. Humans need the environment for their own life, like clean water and even tourism jobs. Without the Everglades life in Florida would difficult. The ecosystem is very special and unique for wildlife also. Many animals and plants live there. And without the Everglades, where are the animals going to live.
Invasive species are now killing the Everglades animals, like the Python or the Anaconda snake. In an article called, "Are the Everglades Forever?," said "They’ve managed to upset the natural food chain so drastically that the Everglades are starting to seem a little bit like Indiana Jones’s dreaded snake pit. Besides being creepy, an ecosystem overrun by pythons is unhealthy." These exotic species are doing a lot to the environment and killing and eating Florida's native species. Which the native species maintain the Everglades ecosystem. However, scientists and members of the government have initiated a plan to restore the Everglades to a healthier state of being, called the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP).
…show more content…
The wetlands give tourism jobs, cities water supply, and keep the agriculture of Southern Florida running. Also the wetlands keeps from flooding from happening to keeping humans safe from hurricanes. If the wetlands suffer and gets harmed, humans do to. Additionally, the is animals and ecosystems that have resilience. Also the article, "Are the Everglades Forever?," says, "Living things, both as individuals and as systems, have resilience (the ability to recover from harm), and can bounce back from damaging situations, especially if they have some help cleaning up the mess. In the case of the Everglades, people are already beginning to work on stopping and reversing the problems that threaten the life of the ecosystem with hopes for a healthier