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Assessing Land Conservation Strategies: The Case of the Florida Everglades
by
Lassiter, Allison
in
Conservation biology
/ Environmental management
/ Urban planning
/ Wildlife Conservation
2009
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Assessing Land Conservation Strategies: The Case of the Florida Everglades
by
Lassiter, Allison
in
Conservation biology
/ Environmental management
/ Urban planning
/ Wildlife Conservation
2009
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Assessing Land Conservation Strategies: The Case of the Florida Everglades
Dissertation
Assessing Land Conservation Strategies: The Case of the Florida Everglades
2009
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Overview
South Florida's Everglades is home to 67 threatened and endangered species. By 2100 it is estimated that sea level rise will inundate over 20% of existing conservation lands. Species will be dislocated and migrate to new land. Simultaneously, more than 500,000 people are moving to the region annually. The new populations are subdividing and developing rural lands. By 2100, it is estimated that over 60% of rural land will be urbanized. In this thesis, I use Geographic Information Systems to project the location of urban land, conservation land and inundated land in South Florida over the next 50 years. I assess fee simple purchase and conservation easements as potential methods of conveying land protection. I conclude that none of the current methods of conservation have the capacity to manage the large scale land protection that will be critical in the coming years, if we are to protect our species from the emergent and significant stressors of climate change and urbanization. I conclude that a major federal initiative based on purchasing deed restrictions and a new agency that specializes in monitoring will be necessary to quickly creating a large, adaptive ecological reserve network.
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
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