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Importance Of Everglades

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The Importance of the Everglades Everglades, a place where animals can roam free in their natural habitat and where people can come to watch them. It’d be a real shame if all wetlands were to all of a sudden disappear. And from the looks of how things are going now with wetlands all over the United States are being drained, degraded or destroyed. As it says in the article “Wetlands and Habitat Loss” things like this have been going on since as far back as the 18th century. We are losing our wetlands at an alarming rate to farmlands, residential areas, and wastelands. States can be heavily impacted by all of this wetland destruction. For example, Louisiana, approximately 40 percent of the country’s total wetlands area are located in Louisiana. It sates in the passage “Wetlands and Habitat Loss” that Louisiana is located at the drainage gateway where the Mississippi River meets the Gulf of Mexico. This is why Louisiana holds such a great percentage of the United States Everglades. If you take away wetlands in states like Louisiana, then there would no longer be anywhere for natural habitats to inhabit creatures that need that type of environment to survive. …show more content…

Other problems arise like snake infestations. When any animal becomes overpopulated in any one area the whole food chain becomes unbalanced in that area. And when animals like snakes become overpopulated the animals they prey on start to die out. Causing any other predators that may prey on the same animal to eventually die out also. As the text suggests in the passage “Are the Everglades Forever?”. So when this happens the Everglades will no longer be a place where many animals can call home. It’ll be a little too overrun with snakes, or any other overpopulated animal

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