FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: December 26, 2003
CONTACT: Kathalyn Gaither, (850) 245-2112
State
Expands Perdido Pitcher Plant Prairie
--226 acres added to the 7,661-acre
Florida Forever project--
PENSACOLA - Perdido Bay and the rare white-top
pitcher plant received further protection with the addition
of 226 acres to the Perdido Pitcher Plant Prairie. Acquired
as a conservation easement, the Florida Forever
purchase offers added protection to the bay while
safeguarding Naval Air Station Pensacola from the threat of
encroachment.
“This purchase further merges our mission of environmental
protection with that of national defense,” said Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP) Secretary David B. Struhs.
“Conserving these lands preserves the environmental integrity
of Perdido Bay while increasing the land buffer that protects
this important military installation from encroachment.”
In partnership with The Nature Conservancy, DEP has
acquired more than half of the 7,661-acre conservation
project adjacent to NAS Pensacola. Placing the lands into
conservation protects two and a half miles of Perdido Bay
from development and maintains the viability of naval
aviation training essential to NAS Pensacola.
Located west of Pensacola, Perdido Pitcher Plant Prairie
supports one of the largest strands of white-top pitcher
plants in Florida. The rare and carnivorous white-top pitcher
plant is unique to the Gulf Coast and found only between the
Apalachicola and Mississippi Rivers. Almost 100 other rare
plants and animals depend on the unusual wet prairie habitat,
including the alligator snapping turtle, sweet pitcher plant
and Chapman’s butterwort.
The acquisition, valued at $406,800, brings state
ownership of the prairie to 4,070 acres. DEP’s Division of
Recreation and Parks will manage the property as part of the
Tarklin Bayou Preserve State Park.
The 10-year, $3 billion Florida Forever program,
established by Governor Jeb Bush, conserves environmentally
sensitive land, restores water resources and preserves
important cultural and historical resources. For more
information, visit
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/lands/carl_ff/.
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