MyFWC.com Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
MyFlorida.com



Handbook

Bookmark and Share

1960-1978

Alligator Alley completed during 60's. Land subdivided and canals dug for Golden Gate Estates.(See Map)

Florida human population hits 5 million, over 2.5 times higher than 1940.

1964
Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife, U.S. Department of the Interior published first official list of endangered species.

1961-1977
Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission releases thousands of hogs in Big Cypress for people to hunt.

1965
Miccosukee State Indian Reservation established.(See Map)
Additional Piper stock released in Everglades National Park.

1966
Endangered Species Preservation Act directs the Secretary of Interior to publish names of native species threatened with extinction and instructs heads of federal agencies to protect native wildlife.

1966-1970
Excessive rainfall coupled with water pumped from the farmlands to water conservation areas to Everglades results in deer drowning by the thousands.

1967
Federal government lists the Florida panther as endangered.


1968
More Piper stock released in Everglades National Park.

1969
Endangered Species Conservation Act strengthens the 1966 act, authorizes funds for buying habitat, and regulates trade in products from endangered species.

1973
Working for the World Wildlife Fund, professional cougar hunter Roy McBride and his dogs tree an aged Florida panther female in the Fisheating Creek area in Glades County.


Congress passes the Endangered Species Act (amended many times, most significantly in 1978, 1982, and 1988). This act defines an endangered species as any plant or animal species in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range. A threatened species is one likely to become an endangered species in the foreseeable future. The act's goal is to restore all federally listed endangered and threatened species to viable, self-sustaining populations.

Through the act the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is authorized to do the following to conserve endangered and threatened species: restrict take and trafficking, develop and carry out recovery plans, seek land purchases or exchanges for important habitat, and provide aid to state conservation agencies.

1974
Big Cypress National Preserve established "to ensure the preservation, conservation, and protection of the national scenic, floral and faunal, and recreational values of the Big Cypress watershed." The name Big Cypress does not refer to the size of the trees, but to the vast area covered by them.

State of Florida purchases Fakahatchee Strand State Preserve. (See Map)

Below: dogs treeing panther in Fakahatchee Strand.


1976
Florida Audubon Society convenes a Florida panther conference in Orlando to discuss the status of the panther and strategies for its conservation.

"At the present time, it is not known whether or where a viable population of Felis concolor occurs in Florida." -- Chris Belden, Florida Panther Recovery Team Leader (Alvarez 1993: 62).

The Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission establishes the Florida Panther Record Clearinghouse. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service appoints panther recovery team.

1978
Panther shot and body recovered at ice plant in Homestead, publicity resulted in the Florida legislature raising the penalty for shooting a panther from a misdemeanor to a felony.

Florida Game Commission biologist finds tracks from 5 panthers in area of Big Cypress and Seminole Indian Reservation.

Continue to: 1980-1989