The Army Corps of Engineers on Wednesday approved a South Florida 
Water Management District request for authorization to use temporary 
forward pumps to pull water from Lake Okeechobee lower than gravity-flow
 will allow, and now, the Corps has agreed to reduce that permit 
extension to one year only, in part to allow for a thorough analysis of 
the impacts of the pumps on the endangered Everglades snail kite.
 The announcement is an important one for the environmental group 
Audubon of Florida, which has long fought for the snail kite habitat.
The health of the snail kite is known to be indicative of the overall
 health of the Everglades system. Because the species’ diet consists 
almost solely of apple snails, the survival of the snail kite depends 
directly on the hydrology and water quality of the watersheds near which
 they live. Water conservation measures are imperative in order to 
comprehensively protect not only the kite habitat, but the greater 
Everglades ecosystem as a whole.
According to the National Park Service, the range of the Florida 
population of snail kites is restricted to watersheds in the central and
 southern part of the state. The species was listed as endangered in 
1967.
“With three severe droughts hitting Lake Okeechobee in less than a decade, it is crucial for state and federal agencies to look closely at impacts of low water levels on the Everglade Snail Kite,” Everglades Policy Associate Jane Graham said in a press release sent out Thursday afternoon. “The Corps’ decision to renew the permit pending an evaluation of the impact of forward pumps on Lake ecology is an encouraging step in the right direction.”
Audubon of Florida Executive Director Eric Draper said that 
regulatory agencies (like the South Florida Water Management District) 
need to “rethink how water from Lake Okeechobee is being used throughout
 the year to put the environment on par with the sugar industry and 
other users.”

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