Almost
half of proposed area of construction falls within hunting and roaming zone
that is essential to animal’s survival
Richard
Luscombe in Miami
Wed 2 Jan
2019 07.00 GMTLast modified on Wed 2 Jan 2019 14.41 GMT
The
extinction of the endangered Florida panther
could be hastened by a large development proposed for the state, environmental
groups are warning, as a major project is expected to win approval from the
Trump administration as early as April.
Up to
45,000 acres of rural Collier county in south-west Florida are earmarked for
housing and commercial development under
the plan drawn up by a coalition of 11 major Florida
landowners, as well as new sand and gravel mines.
Several
new cities would be created by the project, adding hundreds of thousands of new
residents and hundreds of miles of new roadways.
But
almost half of the proposed area of construction falls within what US Fish and
Wildlife Service (FWS) scientists recognise as “primary zone” for dwindling
numbers of the Florida panther, a subspecies of puma of which barely 200 adults
are believed to survive.
The FWS
says preservation of the entirety of the big cats’ hunting and roaming zone,
which incorporates about 20,000 acres of the Collier development, is “essential for
the survival of the Florida panther in the wild”.
“This
area was never intended for this amount of development,” said Amber Crooks,
environmental policy manager of the Conservancy
of Southwest Florida.
“These
parts of Collier county contain a lot of important habitat for the Florida
panther and also so many other rare species and has important public lands on
each corner. The best available science tells us the panther needs all its
available habitat to survive and ultimately recover,” she said.
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