Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

As seas rise, thirst will come before the flood

- By Todd A. Crowl and Rita A. Teutonico Todd A. Crowl, professor of Biology, is the Director of the Southeast Environmen­tal Research Center and Director of the Institute of Water and Environmen­t at the Florida Internatio­nal University College of Arts, Scie

Our house in Coral Gables sits at 14 feet of elevation — a veritable ridge by South Florida standards.

In the not-too-distant future, we will live on one of the small islands of South Florida. The Coral Gables Golf Course will be a prime fishing lake and the beach will be just down the road near what is now Highway 1.

Unfortunat­ely, we are unlikely to still live in our lovely neighborho­od because, much sooner than having beachfront property, we will have run out of fresh water. Our greatest hope for being able to stay and live on the islands of South Florida is the restoratio­n of the Everglades.

All of the towns and cities in South Florida are built on an old reef. The rocks beneath our feet are actually old corals. They come in all shapes and sizes, but they all have something in common — they are very light and porous.

Dead coral is nothing more than calcium carbonate and air — those little holes where the coral polyps lived. Therein lies our problem. Because the earth below us is actually coral, water easily moves through it both from the top and the bottom.

Now let’s consider the problem of sealevel rise. As the seas rise, the pressure of the water increases — water is really very heavy. But it’s not the pressure of the water pushing down that we worry about, it is the pressure of the seawater pushing UP that is our biggest fear.

The Biscayne Aquifer provides about 90 percent of South Florida’s drinking water. That’s about 8 billion gallons of water per day. But as the seas rise and the pressure of the salt water increases, our entire source of fresh water is increasing­ly at risk.

On top of the increase in sea level, we continue to pump water from the aquifer. That decreases the pressure of the fresh water pushing down.

And if things aren’t scary enough, we have drained about two-thirds of the Everglades, the other part of the fresh water pushing down against the rising seas and also refreshing the aquifer.

Indeed, saltwater intrusion into the aquifer has already reduced our freshwater supply by about 17 percent since 1985. So salt water pushing up is increasing and fresh water pushing down is decreasing.

So, our teeter-totter is about to come to halt. That is, unless we get focused and resolute.

Everglades restoratio­n must be our biggest priority. If we don’t restore clean water to the Everglades, the saltwater intrusion into our freshwater aquifer will prevail and we will have to move elsewhere.

After all, fresh water is life. If we want to continue to live in South Florida, then maintainin­g our freshwater supply is imperative, and that will require a restored Everglades. We do not want to fall victim to the adage, “water, water everywhere, ne’r a drop to drink.”

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Teutonico

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