South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

State rivers running out of time

- By Kevin Spear

The Apala chicola River of North Florida in healthier times plunged deeply into tupelo forests, where the flooding waters brewed into an organic energy drink for a web of life that included a bay acclaimed for oysters.

Central Florida’s Ocklawaha River when flowing freely was a crystallin­e thoroughfa­re for a migration of fish, manatees and other wildlife fromthe Atlantic to

the world’s largest treasure of its kind, Silver Springs.

South Florida’s Shark River Slough, a wetland mimicking a river, was enabled by nature to deliver water generously, discreetly and pristinely to the sawgrass, marsh, wading birds, alligators and more of the Everglades.

Asw orld-renowned gems and epitomizin­g the natural landscapes of their Florida regions, the Apalachico­la, Ocklawaha and Shark River Slough have been plundered of their natural abilities for the sake of shipping, farming and real estate. Their waters no longer are healthy, flowing freely or generous.

Florida’s environmen­t is rife with victims and none are more tragic or contested than the two rivers and slough. Storied efforts to reverse their injuries have been piecemeal-to-paltry, or dead in the water.

But an hourglass has tipped. The coup de grace for the impaired treasures looms with climate change and assaults of rising sea levels, hotter weather, more intense storms and punishing cycles of droughts and deluges.

Climate change is expected to resemble COVID-19 by inflicting its worst on those with preexistin­g health conditions.

“Preservati­on and restoratio­n of the Apalachico­la River, Ocklawaha River and Shark River Slough are critical to the preservati­on of Florida,” said Bob Graham, who served for 38 years as a Florida U.S. senator, governor and state legislator. “Climate change has caused new assaults on the health of Florida’s water. As a result,

time is running out to save them.”

Protecting cities from climate change can seem torturous, calling for beefier sea walls, elevated pumps, relocating utilities, overhaulin­g sewers, abandoning some areas and hoisting roads and buildings to drier ground along thousands of miles of vulnerable waterfront­s.

Protecting nature from climate change calls simply for giving back nature’ s original strength sand abilities to withstand the beatings of no rain or too much rain, searing temperatur­e sand invading oceans.

For Florida rivers, that means getting the water right: the volume, timing and cleanlines­s.

“We are fighting water with water,” said Eric Stabenau, an Everglades National Park scientist, describing a central motive for restoring Shark River Slough that also applies to

the Apalachico­la and Ocklawaha.

Restoring natural flows of freshwater inthe riversand slough would hold back the harmful rise of salty seawater.

“Fresh against salt,” Stabenau said. “It’s one of our only tools.”

The Apalachico­la delivers current from as far as Appalachia­n snowmelt. The O ck law a ha is an expression of the Floridan Aquifer. Shark River Slough carries pristine waters clarified by dissolving limestone.

But, to be clear, the two rivers and slough are more than defined channels. They are torsos for appendages of head waters, springs, floodplain­s, tributarie­s and coastal estuaries.

As such, the deliberate wounding of the Apalachico­la’s channel prevents wetlands from enriching river water that ultimately flows to Apalachico­la Bay.

The damming of the Ockl

awaha a half-century ago sabotages river water flowing to the St. Johns River as widens into estuary at the Atlantic.

The historic Tamiami Trail highway’s obstructin­g Shark River Slough prevents the broad, shallow migration of water that should bleed into the park and beyond— to Florida Bay.

“It comes down to an understand­ing of the connectedn­ess of an ecosystem,” said Jennifer Carr, president of Florida Defenders of the Environmen­t, a group dedicated tothe Ocklawaha River.

Biologists, hydrologis­ts, environmen­talists and politician­s know what to do for the two rivers and slough— it’s what Florida has done already elsewhere on a large scale with celebrated success.

Government rebuilt the disembowel­ed headwaters of the St. Johns River for more than $250 million

and undid the channelizi­ng of the Kissimmee River for $1 billion. Those costly reconstruc­tions rescued wetlands, healed waters and revived wildlife.

“We can address climate change,” said William Robert Irvin, president of the American Rivers environmen­tal group, “if we take steps to restore rivers by, for example, taking out dams, restoring the freeflow and restoring natural floodplain­s.”

The Apalachico­la, Ocklawaha and Shark River Slough troubles span many governors: Charlie Crist, Jeb Bush, Bob Graham and others.

“Restoratio­n of the Everglades, the springs in Central and Northern Florida, the Kissimmee River restoratio­n were top priorities,” Bush said. “And we fought in the court to protect the proper, natural flow of water into Apalachico­la Bay .”

Whatthe decades of effort

haved one for the Apalachico­la, Ocklawaha and Shark River Slough is mixed.

The fate of the Apalach seems ensnared in legal wars of no escape. State leaders have all but ignored the Ocklawaha, river champions say, because of petty politics. The Everglades, on the other hand, is gaining velocity for what’s described as the world’s biggest environmen­tal restoratio­n.

With the rivers and slough scattered to far ends of the state, most people may appreciate one but have little to no sense of the other two.

Even the Apalachico­la, Ocklawaha and Shark River Slough champions hardly kno wof each other’s toils.

But they acknowledg­e a commonalit­y: deadlines for their protracted battles. Climate is changing, and time to do something is slipping.

 ?? KEVINSPEAR/ORLANDOSEN­TINELPHOTO­S ?? Jennifer Carr, president of the FloridaDef­enders of the Environmen­t, stands atRodmanDa­m along theOcklawa­ha River with daughter Carmen.
KEVINSPEAR/ORLANDOSEN­TINELPHOTO­S Jennifer Carr, president of the FloridaDef­enders of the Environmen­t, stands atRodmanDa­m along theOcklawa­ha River with daughter Carmen.
 ??  ?? Built decades ago, TamiamiTra­il blocksmost of the Shark River Slough’s flowinto Everglades National Park.
Built decades ago, TamiamiTra­il blocksmost of the Shark River Slough’s flowinto Everglades National Park.

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