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Annual Wetland Drydown Produces Massive Concentration of Fish
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Annual Wetland Drydown Produces Massive Concentration of Fish

Staff record video of nonnative catfish stranded in gator wallow

Recognizing Our Volunteers
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Recognizing Our Volunteers

Sanctuary staff members recognize six volunteers for their 2019 efforts

Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary Streams Worldwide Via Facebook Live
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Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary Streams Worldwide Via Facebook Live

Using Facebook Live, virtual visitors from around the world tuned in to morning sights and sounds at the Sanctuary.

Frequently Asked Questions: Wood Storks at Audubon’s Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary
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Frequently Asked Questions: Wood Storks at Audubon’s Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary

Our only native stork in North America, the Wood Stork (Mycteria americana), is a very large, heavy-billed bird that wades in the shallows of southern swamps. The Wood Stork population in the southeastern United States was estimated at more than 150,000 at one time, but breeding populations in southern Florida have dropped sharply since 1970. By the early 1990s, Wood Storks’ overall numbers had plummeted to around 10,000. Since then, their breeding range has shifted northward into coastal areas of Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina. Destruction of habitat and disruption of water flow through southern Florida are major causes of decline.

Finding Their Happy Place
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Finding Their Happy Place

By Yvette Powell, Cypress Council Member

Partnering to Protect Habitat from Invasive Plants
Marsh And Prairie Restoration

Partnering to Protect Habitat from Invasive Plants

Research provides clues for protecting wetland habitats from the deleterious effects of water hyacinth.

What's Up With Wood Storks
Marsh And Prairie Restoration

What's Up With Wood Storks

No nesting activity recorded during recent flight

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