HA! Hoisted by thier own pertard!
http://www.tcpalm.com/news/2008/jun/12/nesting-birds-could-cause-problems-everglades-clea/Nesting birds could cause problems for Everglades cleanup
Sun-Sentinel
Originally published 09:10 p.m., June 12, 2008
Updated 09:10 p.m., June 12, 2008
In a twist of environmental irony, legal protections for nesting birds could stand in the way of cleaning water used to replenish the Everglades.
Black-necked stilts and other migrating birds are flocking to former agricultural fields turned into 40,000 acres of man-made wetlands, which filter contaminants from stormwater that flows to the Everglades.
The problem is, the long-legged birds nest on the ground at the water line and they are protected by long-standing federal regulations.
That causes a problem for water managers, who need to move water through the stormwater treatment areas so pollutants that wash in from sugar cane fields and other farmland can be cleaned out before the water flows to the Everglades.
So far, the South Florida Water Management District has been able to redirect water to dodge the nests. But as summer rains increase, the choice could be flooding the nests or dumping water into the ocean.
After back-to-back years of drought, the district contends it doesn’t make sense to bypass the treatment areas and dump water that could be used to help the Everglades.
"You are doing restoration. You shouldn’t be penalized for it," district governing board member Michael Collins said.
Since 1994, Florida has invested $1.8 billion in buying land and building more than 40,000 acres of stormwater treatment areas. Plans call for 60,000 acres of the filter marshes as part of a multi-billion-dollar plan to restore water flows to the Everglades
Representatives for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service acknowledged Thursday that the primary purpose of the stormwater treatment areas is to clean water heading to the Everglades. The agency committed to working with the district to come up with a wildlife management plan.
That could be considered a "covering your butt" move that still leaves the nesting birds as an obstacle to getting water flowing through the stormwater treatment areas, district board member Shannon Estenoz said.
"We have got to keep in mind that (treatment areas) are there to help us restore a larger ecosystem," Estenoz said.
It takes about 28 days for the birds’ eggs to hatch and leave the nest, said Chip Merriam, the district’s deputy executive director. That nesting cycle just happens to match the beginning of the summer rainy season, he said.
"It is going to rain," Merriam said. "We are going to do damage to nests."
The black-necked stilts aren’t the first birds to land in the way of Everglades restoration. In late 2006, the district agreed to spend $200,000 to build a canal around three barn owl chicks nesting in an abandoned shed.