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In 1954, concerned citizens rallied together to protect the old-growth cypress forests of Corkscrew Swamp from logging. These trees, now over 500 years old, supported the renowned Corkscrew Wood Stork colony that seasonally hosted tens of thousands of nests. The Corkscrew colony now lies within Audubon’s Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary, a mosaic of wetland and upland habitats that support many wildlife species.
These wetlands also provide irreplaceable benefits to surrounding communities by recharging the aquifer, storing excess surface water, reducing the threat of catastrophic wildfires, and filtering freshwater before it flows into estuaries. The protections afforded by land ownership, however, do not extend beyond the Sanctuary’s border. Threats to Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary’s wetlands, and also to the Corkscrew Swamp region surrounding the Sanctuary, have been intensifying over the past few decades.
Historically, the Sanctuary’s wetlands held water throughout the entire winter “dry” season. In the mid-2000s, the staff at the Sanctuary started noticing substantial changes to water levels in the swamp. Monitoring efforts showed that the wetlands were drying out faster, with water levels remaining lower for longer intervals, despite no change in rainfall patterns.
In Southwest Florida’s flat landscape, water normally moves slowly through swamps like Corkscrew. But canals operated to drain water during rainfall events from low-lying communities downstream have also had the effect of pulling water faster out of this increasingly vulnerable wetland of international significance. The length of time that these wetlands remain filled with water has a direct impact on plants and animals in this water-driven ecosystem. Wood Storks, for example, depend on having an abundant food source throughout the nesting season (December through May).
High water levels throughout the summer/fall rainy season allow fish populations to grow, and falling water levels in the winter and spring concentrate those fish in depressions where wading birds readily feed on them. Disruptions in this cycle reduce food availability for fast-growing Wood Stork chicks.
Audubon scientists believe the combination of regional wetland loss, on the order of tens of thousands of acres over the last 25 years, and drainage of many remaining wetlands, including those near the Sanctuary, has led to the near-collapse of the nesting colony that historically relied on Corkscrew Swamp. This prompted an investigation into the potential causes of these water level changes. A solution to reverse the water-loss trend would not only help Wood Storks, but the greater Everglades ecosystem, as well.
In early 2020, with support from the South Florida Water Management District's Big Cypress Basin, Audubon contracted Water Science Associates (led by Roger Copp and W. Kirk Martin) to complete a hydrologic modeling study aimed at better understanding the causes of the over-drying of Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary. The modeling team compared the relative impact of three stressors: water use (from agriculture and well fields), an influx of woody vegetation, and drainage for flood control, i.e. canals that drain surface waters downstream of the Sanctuary.
While agricultural and public water supply withdrawals have some negative impacts on the Sanctuary, flood management structures and operations downstream are more directly responsible for water loss.
Complete elimination of downstream drainage is not feasible due to residential and commercial development; therefore, the study examined potential engineering and operations changes that could help protect the Sanctuary’s natural resources while continuing to provide necessary flood control for our neighbors. The model demonstrated that improved engineering could provide some water level restoration for the Sanctuary, but more work is necessary to create a more effective solution.
The Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary Hydrologic Model is a very powerful new tool. This tool can provide the information Audubon needs to diagnose the causes of a twenty-year decline in water levels and all the harm attenuating that decline, and also illuminates the regional nature of watershed hydrologic impacts and solutions. That regional nature requires Audubon to work collaboratively with the Big Cypress Basin, the South Florida Water Management District, local governments, and all Audubon’s landowning neighbors in order to solve these grave challenges for everyone’s mutual benefit.
Upon presentation of these findings to the Big Cypress Basin Board of Directors, Chair Roman concurred that the Sanctuary is a gem of Collier County and instructed her team and Basin staff to closely review the study and return with steps forward. Find the recording of that meeting and presentation here.
Shawn Clem, PhD
Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary Director of Conservation
shawn.clem@audubon.org
Brad Cornell
Big Cypress Ecosystem Policy Associate
bradley.cornell@audubon.org
Naples Daily News: Collier commissioners agree to look into Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary water woes
Naples Daily News: Water loss at Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary has put wildlife at risk. New research points to the problem
WINK (CBS) News: A major Southwest Florida wetland is drying up as people move in