The Importance of The Florida Everglades and Estuaries
Facts about the Everglades
Florida Everglades Alligator
Birds
Mammals
The Everglades has more than 40 mammal species within the park. As a semi-aquatic environment, Everglades are home to many species commonly found in drier forest and field habitats. Here, white-tailed deer can be seen foraging in sawgrass prairie and bobcats have been found in the mangroves. Manatees, also known as sea cows, are large aquatic mammals that live in the slowly moving, often murky waters of some regions of the Everglades. Manatees swim very slowly as they graze on seagrass and cannot quickly move out of the way of boats. To watch manatees in action, view a USGS manatee video above. While once common in the region, now there are fewer than one hundred Florida panthers living in the wild in south Florida. The main threat to their survival was once bounty hunters leading to near extinction by the mid-1950s, but now the primary threat is habitat reduction. Top predators of the region, panthers are strictly carnivores with their diet mainly consisting of feral hog, white-tailed deer, racoon, and armadillo. Panthers prefer mature upland forests over other habitat types. Upland forests include hardwood hammocks and pinelands which provide dry ground for panthers to rest and have higher prey density than lower habitats that are prone to flooding. Since the Everglades are mainly wetlands, the panthers in the park are smaller and fewer.