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PRIOR POSTS
Post - Live-aboard Lifestyle Slipping Away
Post - South Florida Crocodiles
Post - Ride to Key West in Comfort
Calls for action on red tide
Elian Gonzalez Revisited
Post - South Florida Spam
Post - To Build or Not to Build?
Post - Animal Invaders in Florida
Post - Exotic Snakes in South Florida
Post - More Exotic Snakes in South Florida
Post - Who should permit - State or Fed
Post - Meet Python Pete
Post - Dolphin rescuers embroiled in lawsuit
Post - Strange South Florida News for 2005
Post - Last Everglades Homesteader Relents, Sells
Post - Florida Panther Dies On Card Sound Road in Everglades
Post - Offshore Oil Drilling on Florida's Coasts
Post - Everglades Python Gets Tracking Device
Boca Grande and the Spiny Tailed Iguana
Shrimp Florida Born & Raised
Large Lobsters Looming
Giant Turtles Still in South Florida

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There's a Doggie in my Soup!
02.27.06 (8:00 pm)   [edit]

Many thanks to Doug Bennett of This week on the Island for this tip on a new bill working it's way through the Florida House of Representatives.

A bill, approved by a House committee Wednesday, would create a three-year test program to allow restaurants, with outdoor dining, to allo w dogs to accompany their humans. Rep. Sheri McInvale, an Orlando Republican, filed the bill after some restaurant owners were threatened with fines for allowing doggy dining.

This conjures up countless mishaps and exciting events. Has anyone seen my hotdog? Will the establishment be serving human and canine food. My chili tastes funny, is it a new recipe? Will the dogs be at the table or confined to terra firma? Madam your child just licked me! The excitment starts when the waitress drops some food. Did that Rottie just eat my Yorkie? New dating dialog, Is that your dog under the table or are you glad to see me? They will never agree to stay home again.  Will there be a new special table for Thanksgiving dinner? If I have to wear a jacket...

This could bring a whole new meaning to Doggie Bag. I can already hear my parrot yelling Discrimination!

 Do you want to eat next to strange dogs?

 
Giant Turtles Still Around in South Florida
02.19.06 (4:14 pm)   [edit]

A dead turtle caused quite a scare when a resident spotted it in a SW Miami-Dade County canal Tuesday Feb. 14,  morning. Not exactly the Valentine's Day suprise expected. The animal was initially reported to be a bear because of its size and large claws.

     More Images (Warning: Contains Graphic Images)

However, officials from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said the animal was a freshwater Alligator Snapping Turtle. It was estimated to be about 4 feet long and well over 200 pounds. Officials believe the turtle died a few days ago because it was very swollen. It was found floating on its back in a canal along Southwest 102nd Avenue.

Lt. Pat Reynolds, of the FWC, said a resident had seen the turtle a few days ago and thought it was sick. "She took a stick and pushed it away and thought maybe it would eat the little ducks," Reynolds said. "Maybe it was sick or it just died of old age or something."

Residents were relived that the animal was a turtle. "I think a lot of neighbors are at ease that there are no bears in the back yard," Reynolds said.

 
Large Lobsters Looming
02.14.06 (12:04 am)   [edit]

With the problems caused by the storms of the last couple of years, there are many less lobsters being caught. While this is certainly a difficult time for the commercial trappers, it could bring a boom time for divers searching for large lobsters to throw on the grill. There are only 6 weeks left to this season which ends March 31. I will have to get my wetsuit out and brave the cooler waters for some like this one.

Florida Keys Lobsters

 
Shrimp Florida Born and Raised Mmm Mmm Good
02.11.06 (4:14 pm)   [edit]

Down on the (shrimp) farm: They're organic, planet-friendly and Florida-grown

BY LINDA BLADHOLM
Miami Herald Columnist

As the oceans are depleted, the future of seafood will likely lie in aquaculture. And the future of aquaculture may lie 90 miles from the nearest seashore amid the silver-plumed sugar-cane fields of south-central Florida. OceanBoy Farms is based on a 1,500-acre spread near LaBelle with a processing plant 25 miles east on the outskirts of Clewiston, a quiet sugar town near Lake Okeechobee. It's the nation's largest commercial producer of organic shrimp, and, according to one expert, the most advanced seafood-farming operation anywhere.

''OceanBoy is the biggest, baddest and meanest high-tech aquaculture farm in existence,'' says Carlos Martinez, an aquaculture expert with the University of Florida's Sea Grant marine extension program. ``They are a fantastic and responsible facility leading the way in aquaculture technology.''

The $55 million, privately held operation grew out of a master's thesis that founder David McMahon wrote a decade ago at the Nova Southeastern University's Oceanographic Center on the feasibility of raising ocean shrimp in fresh water. His goal was to find a way of eliminating the pollution generated by ocean-based shrimp farms and the by-catch waste caused by commercial shrimping.

OceanBoy -- a nickname McMahon picked up at Nova -- is based on two discoveries he made: First, though they can only reproduce in salt water, shrimp can be acclimated to fresh water. And second, this patch of Hendry County sits atop an aquifer whose water not only contains the minerals shrimp need to produce shells, but is slightly saline -- useless for crop irrigation but great for shrimp.

Rest of the Story  Shrimp Recipes 

 

 
Boca Grande and the Spiny Tailed Iguana
02.10.06 (7:35 pm)   [edit]

After a 30-year co-existence with the island's infamous invasive, Boca Grande is moving toward a serious eradication effort of the Mexican spiny-tail iguana. A pest that originated with a couple of freed pets in the 1970s, in the past five years iguanas have increased from 2,000 to 10,000, more than double the island's in-season human population.Boca Spiny Tailed Iguana

Many residents have told county officials they would be willing to pay to get the iguana population under control. The lizards — estimated to number more than 10,000 in south Florida — are not native to Boca Grande, which is on the barrier island of Gasparilla.  Iguanas have become an enemy to some residents, who say they often find them inside their home, nesting in crawl spaces, shredding attic insulation, scratching holes in screens and siding and eating new flower buds.

The black spiny-tailed iguana is considered an invasive species because it is not native to the Florida ecosystem. Originally from Mexico, the iguana is believed to cause both environmental and economic harm outside of its native ecosystem. In Boca Grande, iguana burrows are feared to undermine the dune system as well as negatively impact native endangered species, such as the gopher tortoise. Since these animals are climbers, they have caused damage to homes and businesses by nesting in attics.

Read More Posts on this Subject Animal Invaders in Florida, Exotic Snakes in South Florida, More Exotic Snakes in South Florida, Meet Python Pete Everglades Python Gets Tracking Device

 
Everglades Python Gets Tracking Device
02.09.06 (7:37 pm)   [edit]

A 13-foot Burmese python is headed to the Florida Everglades, except this one's every move will now be tracked. To better understand the presence of pythons in the Everglades, scientists at Davidson College in North Carolina inserted a tracking device inside the animal. Everglades Park research technicians will follow the snake's movement and study how the reptile adapts to its new environment.

Pythons, elusive creatures which are difficult to find and capture, are rapidly becoming the new predators of the swamp. Just last year, a 13-foot python was found with a six-foot alligator halfway down its body. So far, scientists have implanted tracking devices inside four Burmese pythons, and will study the animals for at least a year.

Read these prior posts on this subject: Animal Invaders in Florida, Exotic Snakes in South Florida, More Exotic Snakes in South Florida, Meet Python Pete

 

 
Offshore Oil Drilling on Florida's Coasts
02.04.06 (5:32 pm)   [edit]
BY BECKY IANNOTTA Citizen Staff

KEY WEST — Simon and Mimi Stafford decorated their truck with oil cans, fishing nets and "dead" plastic animals and joined 1,000 other residents to protest plans for oil drilling off the Florida Keys on "Black Friday" in June 1989.

 

Led by the late Rep. Dante Fascell, Congress passed a ban on drilling off the Keys in 1990, and the state and federal governments later extended a ban to the entire Florida coast. The designation of Florida Keys waters as a national marine sanctuary in 1990 assured oil rigs would not set up within sanctuary boundaries, which extend about 12 miles offshore.

In a development that has revived memories of those protests, the Department of the Interior announced Jan. 3 that it had created a new set of "administrative" ; boundaries among the states with oil interests in the Gulf of Mexico.

The rule published in the Federal Register moves the boundary between Florida and Louisiana waters dozens of miles east of the existing "planning" boundary that federal and state authorities so far have relied upon to determine which state's environmental decisions apply and how proceeds from oil drilling might be split. Florida officials have long opposed drilling near the state's coast, while Louisiana leaders are pushing for more drilling to boost the state's economy.

"The things that are going on right now are pretty spooky, but that's what happens when people's attention is diverted elsewhere," said Mimi Stafford, who runs a commercial fishing business with Simon. "I think we have to continue to be as vigilant as we can."

The Department of the Interior says the new administrative boundaries would not necessarily reopen areas to drilling. The boundaries are tied to energy legislation that directs the department to research alternative energy sources and might be used to craft a five-year plan outlining where the federal government will issue offshore leases beginning in 2007, according to a spokeswoman for Interior's Minerals Management Service. She said agency rules prevent her from being named.

The administrative boundaries "have no impact on revenue sharing or moratoria, no impact on previous administrative commitments or presidential withdrawals [of areas for drilling]," she said. "They create options for the secretary to consider in drafting a five-year plan." Completion of the plan is imminent, she said.

Florida's two senators and 14 of its Republican and Democratic congressional representatives questioned the new boundaries in a Jan. 23 letter to Interior Secretary Gale Norton.

"While the long-term effects of this change remain unclear, we are concerned that this is yet another attempt to undermine Florida's ability to control activities off its own coast, including offshore oil and gas drilling," according to the letter, signed by Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., whose district includes the Florida Keys. "To Florida's residents, I tell them this: Rest assured, we will continue working together, using whatever means necessary, to ensure that Florida maintains control of offshore activities near our coast," she said in a prepared statement.

Florida politicians are concerned about the undeveloped Lease Sale Area 181, an area off the Florida Panhandle that has been protected by a congressional moratorium since 1990. In 2002, the federal government opened the southwestern section of Area 181 and awarded 95 leases for bids totaling $340 million. The leases were issued in an area more than 100 miles from Florida's coast, according to the Minerals Management Service. Other parts of Area 181 could be leased for drilling if included in the Department of Interior's five-year plan.

Attempts to legislate a change in the boundaries and open other parts of Area 181 to drilling failed in Congress last year. Richard Charter, co-chair of the environmental group National Outer Continental Shelf Coalition, said the new rule creating administrative boundaries is a "holiday sneak attack" to accomplish something that Congress could not.

DeeVon Quirolo of Reef Relief, who helped organize Black Friday in Key West in 1989, said Keys residents should watch for any changes that might clear the way for offshore drilling near Florida's Gulf coast.

Drilling in the region, even hundreds of miles from the Keys, could send mud laden with toxins and compounds into the loop current that arcs from the Yucatan Channel into the Gulf of Mexico and down the west coast of Florida toward the Keys, said Quirolo.

"It is the gulf loop-current that makes [drilling] dangerous because it brings that drilling mud right into the nearshore waters," she said. Sediment in water can kill fragile corals that are part of the Keys reef system.

The protests in Key West in 1989 were triggered by plans for drilling northwest of the Dry Tortugas islands 70 miles west of Key West, an area that is now part of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. That wasn't the first time the Keys were eyed as a potential oil source.

In 1959, Gulf Oil Company began exploratory drilling about 20 miles west of Key West near the uninhabited Marquesas Keys.

According to the 1962 report, "Florida Petroleum Exploration and Prospects," four permits were granted for drilling near the Marquesas. The permits allowed drilling of up to 20,000 feet in one instance, but equipment failed before those depths were reached. The report does not say whether oil was found, and the industry normally would not reveal that information, said Key West historian Tom Hambright.

"In the '50s and '60s when they were doing tests down here, they could only drill in shallow water," Hambright said. "At that time, everybody was looking at it as big money."

riannotta@keysnews.com

 

 
Florida Panther Dies On Card Sound Road in Everglades
02.04.06 (9:26 am)   [edit]

A panther struck and killed by a car west of the Card Sound Bridge, between South Florida and the Florida Keys, is fueling activists' opposition to a proposed development.

Everglades National Park PhotoEverglades National Park Photo

The odds of seeing a Florida panther, one of the rarest creatures in the world, are long. Odds of a panther being struck by a car in Southeast Florida are longer still -- it last happened nearly 20 years ago. Odds of the circumstances surrounding a female cat that was killed Thursday night along Card Sound Road make winning the 23 million-to-one lottery jackpot sound downright likely. That's because the people who witnessed the panther hit-and-run are environmentalists who two days earlier filed a federal lawsuit aimed at derailing a 6,000-home development proposed just up the road. One of their arguments is the remaining open lands south of Florida City and Homestead provide critical habitat for panthers, an animal protected under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. The activists acknowledged the coincidence sounds improbable, but called it fate that they crossed paths with an unfortunate panther in a place they are battling to preserve.

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