Stunning Photos of the Endangered Everglades | Mac Stone | TED Talks

86,651 views ・ 2015-10-22

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
So I've had the great privilege
0
12658
2056
00:14
of traveling to some incredible places,
1
14738
2416
00:17
photographing these distant landscapes and remote cultures
2
17178
4234
00:21
all over the world.
3
21436
1426
00:22
I love my job.
4
22886
1410
00:24
But people think it's this string of epiphanies
5
24320
2565
00:26
and sunrises and rainbows,
6
26909
2489
00:29
when in reality, it looks more something like this.
7
29422
2764
00:32
(Laughter)
8
32210
1222
00:33
This is my office.
9
33456
1525
00:35
We can't afford the fanciest places to stay at night,
10
35473
2631
00:38
so we tend to sleep a lot outdoors.
11
38128
2838
00:41
As long as we can stay dry,
12
41365
1429
00:42
that's a bonus.
13
42818
1401
00:44
We also can't afford the fanciest restaurants.
14
44243
2405
00:46
So we tend to eat whatever's on the local menu.
15
46672
2920
00:50
And if you're in the Ecuadorian Páramo,
16
50045
3072
00:53
you're going to eat a large rodent called a cuy.
17
53141
2762
00:55
(Laughter)
18
55927
1617
00:57
But what makes our experiences perhaps a little bit different
19
57568
3618
01:01
and a little more unique than that of the average person
20
61210
2722
01:03
is that we have this gnawing thing in the back of our mind
21
63956
3456
01:07
that even in our darkest moments, and those times of despair,
22
67436
3917
01:11
we think, "Hey, there might be an image to be made here,
23
71377
3902
01:15
there might be a story to be told."
24
75303
2123
01:18
And why is storytelling important?
25
78164
1917
01:20
Well, it helps us to connect with our cultural and our natural heritage.
26
80509
4530
01:25
And in the Southeast,
27
85063
1159
01:26
there's an alarming disconnect between the public
28
86246
3058
01:29
and the natural areas that allow us to be here in the first place.
29
89328
3723
01:33
We're visual creatures,
30
93770
2205
01:35
so we use what we see to teach us what we know.
31
95999
3352
01:39
Now the majority of us aren't going to willingly go
32
99773
2398
01:42
way down to a swamp.
33
102195
1652
01:44
So how can we still expect those same people to then advocate
34
104638
3594
01:48
on behalf of their protection?
35
108256
1718
01:50
We can't.
36
110410
1174
01:51
So my job, then, is to use photography as a communication tool,
37
111608
4245
01:55
to help bridge the gap between the science and the aesthetics,
38
115877
3975
01:59
to get people talking,
39
119876
1618
02:01
to get them thinking,
40
121518
1369
02:02
and to hopefully, ultimately,
41
122911
1657
02:04
get them caring.
42
124592
1391
02:06
I started doing this 15 years ago right here in Gainesville,
43
126841
2910
02:09
right here in my backyard.
44
129775
1875
02:11
And I fell in love with adventure and discovery,
45
131674
2848
02:14
going to explore all these different places
46
134546
2057
02:16
that were just minutes from my front doorstep.
47
136627
2293
02:18
There are a lot of beautiful places to find.
48
138944
2588
02:21
Despite all these years that have passed,
49
141872
2302
02:24
I still see the world through the eyes of a child
50
144198
2294
02:26
and I try to incorporate that sense of wonderment
51
146516
2853
02:29
and that sense of curiosity into my photography
52
149393
4681
02:34
as often as I can.
53
154098
1750
02:37
And we're pretty lucky because here in the South,
54
157006
2298
02:39
we're still blessed with a relatively blank canvas
55
159328
3072
02:42
that we can fill with the most fanciful adventures
56
162424
3184
02:45
and incredible experiences.
57
165632
2447
02:48
It's just a matter of how far our imagination will take us.
58
168103
3944
02:52
See, a lot of people look at this and they say,
59
172402
2199
02:54
"Oh yeah, wow, that's a pretty tree."
60
174625
1778
02:56
But I don't just see a tree --
61
176427
1471
02:57
I look at this and I see opportunity.
62
177922
2579
03:00
I see an entire weekend.
63
180525
1597
03:03
Because when I was a kid, these were the types of images
64
183122
2637
03:05
that got me off the sofa and dared me to explore,
65
185783
2468
03:08
dared me to go find the woods
66
188275
1441
03:09
and put my head underwater and see what we have.
67
189740
2895
03:13
And folks, I've been photographing all over the world
68
193433
2801
03:16
and I promise you,
69
196258
1341
03:17
what we have here in the South,
70
197623
1495
03:19
what we have in the Sunshine State,
71
199142
1681
03:20
rivals anything else that I've seen.
72
200847
2295
03:23
But yet our tourism industry is busy promoting all the wrong things.
73
203943
4012
03:28
Before most kids are 12, they'll have been to Disney World
74
208698
2731
03:31
more times than they've been in a canoe
75
211453
1961
03:33
or camping under a starry sky.
76
213438
2842
03:36
And I have nothing against Disney or Mickey; I used to go there, too.
77
216816
3547
03:40
But they're missing out on those fundamental connections
78
220387
2659
03:43
that create a real sense of pride and ownership
79
223070
3222
03:46
for the place that they call home.
80
226316
2103
03:49
And this is compounded by the issue that the landscapes
81
229251
3039
03:52
that define our natural heritage
82
232314
2109
03:54
and fuel our aquifer for our drinking water
83
234447
2976
03:57
have been deemed as scary and dangerous and spooky.
84
237447
4443
04:02
When our ancestors first came here,
85
242329
1753
04:04
they warned, "Stay out of these areas, they're haunted.
86
244106
2636
04:06
They're full of evil spirits and ghosts."
87
246766
3097
04:09
I don't know where they came up with that idea.
88
249887
2346
04:12
But it's actually led to a very real disconnect,
89
252804
2632
04:15
a very real negative mentality
90
255460
1761
04:17
that has kept the public disinterested, silent,
91
257245
3578
04:20
and ultimately, our environment at risk.
92
260847
2565
04:24
We're a state that's surrounded and defined by water,
93
264523
3452
04:27
and yet for centuries,
94
267999
1276
04:29
swamps and wetlands have been regarded
95
269299
1893
04:31
as these obstacles to overcome.
96
271216
2707
04:34
And so we've treated them as these second-class ecosystems,
97
274367
3982
04:38
because they have very little monetary value
98
278373
2264
04:40
and of course, they're known to harbor alligators and snakes --
99
280661
3685
04:44
which, I'll admit, these aren't the most cuddly of ambassadors.
100
284370
3298
04:47
(Laughter)
101
287692
1136
04:48
So it became assumed, then, that the only good swamp
102
288852
2778
04:51
was a drained swamp.
103
291654
1318
04:53
And in fact,
104
293364
1151
04:54
draining a swamp to make way for agriculture and development
105
294539
3411
04:57
was considered the very essence of conservation not too long ago.
106
297974
3913
05:02
But now we're backpedaling,
107
302522
1546
05:04
because the more we come to learn about these sodden landscapes,
108
304092
3351
05:07
the more secrets we're starting to unlock
109
307467
1966
05:09
about interspecies relationships
110
309457
2363
05:11
and the connectivity of habitats, watersheds and flyways.
111
311844
4550
05:17
Take this bird, for example:
112
317040
1985
05:19
this is the prothonotary warbler.
113
319049
1888
05:20
I love this bird because it's a swamp bird,
114
320961
2186
05:23
through and through, a swamp bird.
115
323171
1704
05:24
They nest and they mate and they breed in these old-growth swamps
116
324899
3648
05:28
in these flooded forests.
117
328571
1464
05:30
And so after the spring, after they raise their young,
118
330059
2548
05:32
they then fly thousand of miles over the Gulf of Mexico
119
332631
2805
05:35
into Central and South America.
120
335460
1949
05:37
And then after the winter,
121
337806
1252
05:39
the spring rolls around and they come back.
122
339082
2015
05:41
They fly thousands of miles over the Gulf of Mexico.
123
341121
2899
05:44
And where do they go? Where do they land?
124
344044
2906
05:47
Right back in the same tree.
125
347474
2516
05:50
That's nuts.
126
350686
1150
05:52
This is a bird the size of a tennis ball --
127
352151
3347
05:55
I mean, that's crazy!
128
355522
1677
05:57
I used a GPS to get here today,
129
357223
2550
05:59
and this is my hometown.
130
359797
1667
06:01
(Laughter)
131
361488
1271
06:02
It's crazy.
132
362783
1157
06:04
So what happens, then, when this bird flies over the Gulf of Mexico
133
364374
3690
06:08
into Central America for the winter
134
368088
1868
06:09
and then the spring rolls around and it flies back,
135
369980
2441
06:12
and it comes back to this:
136
372445
2767
06:15
a freshly sodded golf course?
137
375236
1894
06:17
This is a narrative that's all too commonly unraveling
138
377942
2589
06:20
here in this state.
139
380555
1187
06:21
And this is a natural process that's occurred for thousands of years
140
381766
3239
06:25
and we're just now learning about it.
141
385029
1778
06:26
So you can imagine all else we have to learn about these landscapes
142
386831
3163
06:30
if we just preserve them first.
143
390018
1858
06:31
Now despite all this rich life that abounds in these swamps,
144
391900
4531
06:36
they still have a bad name.
145
396455
1824
06:38
Many people feel uncomfortable with the idea of wading
146
398828
3666
06:42
into Florida's blackwater.
147
402518
1664
06:44
I can understand that.
148
404206
1789
06:46
But what I loved about growing up in the Sunshine State
149
406019
3141
06:49
is that for so many of us,
150
409184
1282
06:50
we live with this latent but very palpable fear
151
410490
3789
06:54
that when we put our toes into the water,
152
414303
2341
06:56
there might be something much more ancient
153
416668
2982
06:59
and much more adapted than we are.
154
419674
2137
07:02
Knowing that you're not top dog is a welcomed discomfort, I think.
155
422664
4799
07:08
How often in this modern and urban and digital age
156
428082
3886
07:11
do you actually get the chance to feel vulnerable,
157
431992
3644
07:15
or consider that the world may not have been made for just us?
158
435660
4166
07:19
So for the last decade,
159
439850
1282
07:21
I began seeking out these areas where the concrete yields to forest
160
441156
3395
07:24
and the pines turn to cypress,
161
444575
2178
07:26
and I viewed all these mosquitoes and reptiles,
162
446777
3645
07:30
all these discomforts,
163
450446
1499
07:31
as affirmations that I'd found true wilderness,
164
451969
3532
07:35
and I embrace them wholly.
165
455525
2160
07:37
Now as a conservation photographer obsessed with blackwater,
166
457709
3403
07:41
it's only fitting that I'd eventually end up
167
461136
2120
07:43
in the most famous swamp of all:
168
463280
2177
07:45
the Everglades.
169
465481
1250
07:47
Growing up here in North Central Florida,
170
467144
1969
07:49
it always had these enchanted names,
171
469137
1730
07:50
places like Loxahatchee and Fakahatchee,
172
470891
3342
07:54
Corkscrew, Big Cypress.
173
474257
2122
07:56
I started what turned into a five-year project
174
476403
3540
07:59
to hopefully reintroduce the Everglades in a new light,
175
479967
3750
08:03
in a more inspired light.
176
483741
1681
08:05
But I knew this would be a tall order, because here you have an area
177
485922
3225
08:09
that's roughly a third the size the state of Florida, it's huge.
178
489171
3029
08:12
And when I say Everglades,
179
492224
1277
08:13
most people are like, "Oh, yeah, the national park."
180
493525
2468
08:16
But the Everglades is not just a park; it's an entire watershed,
181
496017
5013
08:21
starting with the Kissimmee chain of lakes in the north,
182
501054
3005
08:24
and then as the rains would fall in the summer,
183
504083
2225
08:26
these downpours would flow into Lake Okeechobee,
184
506332
2632
08:28
and Lake Okeechobee would fill up and it would overflow its banks
185
508988
3247
08:32
and spill southward, ever slowly, with the topography,
186
512259
3274
08:35
and get into the river of grass, the Sawgrass Prairies,
187
515557
2596
08:38
before meting into the cypress slews,
188
518177
2045
08:40
until going further south into the mangrove swamps,
189
520246
2687
08:42
and then finally -- finally -- reaching Florida Bay,
190
522957
3750
08:46
the emerald gem of the Everglades,
191
526731
1773
08:48
the great estuary,
192
528528
1183
08:49
the 850 square-mile estuary.
193
529735
2253
08:52
So sure, the national park is the southern end of this system,
194
532464
4333
08:56
but all the things that make it unique are these inputs that come in,
195
536821
3303
09:00
the fresh water that starts 100 miles north.
196
540148
2807
09:02
So no manner of these political or invisible boundaries
197
542979
3265
09:06
protect the park from polluted water or insufficient water.
198
546268
4387
09:11
And unfortunately, that's precisely what we've done.
199
551242
2826
09:14
Over the last 60 years,
200
554630
1533
09:16
we have drained, we have dammed, we have dredged the Everglades
201
556187
3357
09:19
to where now only one third of the water that used to reach the bay
202
559568
3981
09:23
now reaches the bay today.
203
563573
2007
09:26
So this story is not all sunshine and rainbows, unfortunately.
204
566586
3668
09:30
For better or for worse,
205
570953
1886
09:32
the story of the Everglades is intrinsically tied
206
572863
3417
09:36
to the peaks and the valleys of mankind's relationship
207
576304
3196
09:39
with the natural world.
208
579524
1340
09:41
But I'll show you these beautiful pictures,
209
581255
2025
09:43
because it gets you on board.
210
583304
1461
09:44
And while I have your attention, I can tell you the real story.
211
584789
3128
09:47
It's that we're taking this,
212
587941
1951
09:49
and we're trading it for this,
213
589916
2963
09:52
at an alarming rate.
214
592903
1495
09:55
And what's lost on so many people
215
595358
1710
09:57
is the sheer scale of which we're discussing.
216
597092
2511
09:59
Because the Everglades is not just responsible for the drinking water
217
599627
3428
10:03
for 7 million Floridians;
218
603079
2204
10:05
today it also provides the agricultural fields
219
605307
2538
10:07
for the year-round tomatoes and oranges
220
607869
2559
10:10
for over 300 million Americans.
221
610452
2831
10:14
And it's that same seasonal pulse of water in the summer
222
614391
3314
10:17
that built the river of grass 6,000 years ago.
223
617729
3893
10:22
Ironically, today, it's also responsible for the over half a million acres
224
622284
4378
10:26
of the endless river of sugarcane.
225
626686
2455
10:29
These are the same fields that are responsible
226
629899
2169
10:32
for dumping exceedingly high levels of fertilizers into the watershed,
227
632092
4024
10:36
forever changing the system.
228
636140
2163
10:38
But in order for you to not just understand how this system works,
229
638749
3212
10:41
but to also get personally connected to it,
230
641985
2063
10:44
I decided to break the story down into several different narratives.
231
644072
3275
10:47
And I wanted that story to start in Lake Okeechobee,
232
647371
2788
10:50
the beating heart of the Everglade system.
233
650183
2747
10:52
And to do that, I picked an ambassador,
234
652954
2463
10:55
an iconic species.
235
655441
1249
10:57
This is the Everglade snail kite.
236
657204
1992
10:59
It's a great bird,
237
659720
1246
11:00
and they used to nest in the thousands,
238
660990
1874
11:02
thousands in the northern Everglades.
239
662888
1803
11:04
And then they've gone down to about 400 nesting pairs today.
240
664715
3504
11:08
And why is that?
241
668243
1345
11:09
Well, it's because they eat one source of food, an apple snail,
242
669612
3124
11:12
about the size of a ping-pong ball, an aquatic gastropod.
243
672760
3401
11:16
So as we started damming up the Everglades,
244
676185
3225
11:19
as we started diking Lake Okeechobee and draining the wetlands,
245
679434
3477
11:22
we lost the habitat for the snail.
246
682935
2112
11:25
And thus, the population of the kites declined.
247
685071
2792
11:28
And so, I wanted a photo that would not only communicate this relationship
248
688454
3496
11:31
between wetland, snail and bird,
249
691974
3089
11:35
but I also wanted a photo that would communicate
250
695087
2249
11:37
how incredible this relationship was,
251
697360
2794
11:40
and how very important it is that they've come to depend on each other,
252
700178
4156
11:44
this healthy wetland and this bird.
253
704358
1667
11:46
And to do that, I brainstormed this idea.
254
706049
1972
11:48
I started sketching out these plans to make a photo,
255
708045
3238
11:51
and I sent it to the wildlife biologist down in Okeechobee --
256
711307
2887
11:54
this is an endangered bird, so it takes special permission to do.
257
714218
3087
11:57
So I built this submerged platform
258
717329
1694
11:59
that would hold snails just right under the water.
259
719047
2482
12:01
And I spent months planning this crazy idea.
260
721553
4458
12:06
And I took this platform down to Lake Okeechobee
261
726035
2976
12:09
and I spent over a week in the water,
262
729035
2072
12:11
wading waist-deep, 9-hour shifts from dawn until dusk,
263
731131
3716
12:14
to get one image that I thought might communicate this.
264
734871
3160
12:18
And here's the day that it finally worked:
265
738055
2215
12:20
[Video: (Mac Stone narrating) After setting up the platform,
266
740294
2857
12:23
I look off and I see a kite coming over the cattails.
267
743175
2537
12:25
And I see him scanning and searching.
268
745736
1922
12:27
And he gets right over the trap,
269
747682
1605
12:29
and I see that he's seen it.
270
749311
1521
12:30
And he beelines, he goes straight for the trap.
271
750856
2723
12:33
And in that moment, all those months of planning, waiting,
272
753603
3156
12:36
all the sunburn, mosquito bites --
273
756783
2110
12:38
suddenly, they're all worth it.
274
758917
2538
12:41
(Mac Stone in film) Oh my gosh, I can't believe it!]
275
761479
3915
12:45
You can believe how excited I was when that happened.
276
765695
2597
12:48
But what the idea was,
277
768316
1340
12:49
is that for someone who's never seen this bird
278
769680
2199
12:51
and has no reason to care about it,
279
771903
2070
12:53
these photos, these new perspectives,
280
773997
2625
12:56
will help shed a little new light on just one species
281
776646
3122
12:59
that makes this watershed so incredible, so valuable, so important.
282
779792
4282
13:04
Now, I know I can't come here to Gainesville
283
784615
2923
13:07
and talk to you about animals in the Everglades
284
787562
2246
13:09
without talking about gators.
285
789832
1788
13:11
I love gators, I grew up loving gators.
286
791644
2290
13:14
My parents always said I had an unhealthy relationship with gators.
287
794361
3416
13:17
But what I like about them is,
288
797801
1468
13:19
they're like the freshwater equivalent of sharks.
289
799293
2604
13:21
They're feared, they're hated,
290
801921
1648
13:23
and they are tragically misunderstood.
291
803593
2364
13:26
Because these are a unique species, they're not just apex predators.
292
806386
3764
13:30
In the Everglades,
293
810174
1290
13:31
they are the very architects of the Everglades,
294
811488
2494
13:34
because as the water drops down in the winter
295
814006
2143
13:36
during the dry season,
296
816173
1158
13:37
they start excavating these holes called gator holes.
297
817355
3022
13:40
And they do this because as the water drops down,
298
820401
2310
13:42
they'll be able to stay wet and they'll be able to forage.
299
822735
3387
13:46
And now this isn't just affecting them,
300
826645
2319
13:48
other animals also depend on this relationship,
301
828988
2233
13:51
so they become a keystone species as well.
302
831245
2678
13:54
So how do you make an apex predator, an ancient reptile,
303
834677
4235
13:58
at once look like it dominates the system,
304
838936
2478
14:01
but at the same time, look vulnerable?
305
841438
2443
14:04
Well, you wade into a pit of about 120 of them,
306
844706
4043
14:08
then you hope that you've made the right decision.
307
848773
2406
14:11
(Laughter)
308
851203
1764
14:13
I still have all my fingers, it's cool.
309
853955
1960
14:16
But I understand, I know I'm not going to rally you guys,
310
856677
2702
14:19
I'm not going to rally the troops to "Save the Everglades for the gators!"
311
859403
3610
14:23
It won't happen because they're so ubiquitous,
312
863037
2198
14:25
we see them now,
313
865259
1151
14:26
they're one of the great conservation success stories of the US.
314
866434
3342
14:29
But there is one species in the Everglades that no matter who you are,
315
869800
3326
14:33
you can't help but love, too, and that's the roseate spoonbill.
316
873150
3079
14:36
These birds are great, but they've had a really tough time in the Everglades,
317
876253
3631
14:39
because they started out with thousands of nesting pairs in Florida Bay,
318
879908
3466
14:43
and at the turn of the 20th century,
319
883398
2063
14:45
they got down to two -- two nesting pairs.
320
885485
3592
14:49
And why?
321
889101
1164
14:50
That's because women thought they looked better on their hats
322
890681
2896
14:53
then they did flying in the sky.
323
893601
2013
14:56
Then we banned the plume trade,
324
896324
2409
14:58
and their numbers started rebounding.
325
898757
2118
15:00
And as their numbers started rebounding,
326
900899
2025
15:02
scientists began to pay attention,
327
902948
1739
15:04
they started studying these birds.
328
904711
1713
15:06
And what they found out is that
329
906448
1485
15:07
these birds' behavior is intrinsically tied
330
907957
2158
15:10
to the annual draw-down cycle of water in the Everglades,
331
910139
2918
15:13
the thing that defines the Everglades watershed.
332
913081
2679
15:16
What they found out is that
333
916291
1537
15:17
these birds started nesting in the winter as the water drew down,
334
917852
3068
15:20
because they're tactile feeders, so they have to touch whatever they eat.
335
920944
3580
15:24
And so they wait for these concentrated pools of fish
336
924548
3098
15:27
to be able to feed enough to feed their young.
337
927670
2397
15:30
So these birds became the very icon of the Everglades --
338
930877
2989
15:33
an indicator species of the overall health of the system.
339
933890
3492
15:37
And just as their numbers were rebounding in the mid-20th century --
340
937406
3207
15:40
shooting up to 900, 1,000, 1,100, 1,200 --
341
940637
4649
15:45
just as that started happening, we started draining the southern Everglades.
342
945310
3756
15:49
And we stopped two-thirds of that water from moving south.
343
949090
3504
15:52
And it had drastic consequences.
344
952618
2499
15:55
And just as those numbers started reaching their peak,
345
955584
2614
15:58
unfortunately, today, the real spoonbill story,
346
958222
3073
16:01
the real photo of what it looks like is more something like this.
347
961319
4617
16:07
And we're down to less than 70 nesting pairs in Florida Bay today,
348
967007
4616
16:11
because we've disrupted the system so much.
349
971647
2544
16:14
So all these different organizations are shouting, they're screaming,
350
974215
3251
16:17
"The Everglades is fragile! It's fragile!"
351
977490
2015
16:19
It is not.
352
979529
1151
16:20
It is resilient.
353
980704
1550
16:22
Because despite all we've taken, despite all we've done and we've drained
354
982278
3492
16:25
and we've dammed and we've dredged it,
355
985794
1839
16:27
pieces of it are still here, waiting to be put back together.
356
987657
2896
16:30
And this is what I've loved about South Florida,
357
990577
2254
16:32
that in one place, you have this unstoppable force of mankind
358
992855
3774
16:36
meeting the immovable object of tropical nature.
359
996653
3435
16:40
And it's at this new frontier that we are forced with a new appraisal.
360
1000973
3840
16:44
What is wilderness worth?
361
1004837
1683
16:47
What is the value of biodiversity, or our drinking water?
362
1007119
3094
16:51
And fortunately, after decades of debate,
363
1011195
2433
16:53
we're finally starting to act on those questions.
364
1013652
2967
16:56
We're slowly undertaking these projects
365
1016643
2357
16:59
to bring more freshwater back to the bay.
366
1019024
2496
17:01
But it's up to us as citizens, as residents, as stewards
367
1021544
3655
17:05
to hold our elected officials to their promises.
368
1025223
2955
17:09
What can you do to help?
369
1029154
1833
17:11
It's so easy.
370
1031011
1255
17:12
Just get outside, get out there.
371
1032290
1968
17:14
Take your friends out, take your kids out,
372
1034282
2031
17:16
take your family out.
373
1036337
1575
17:17
Hire a fishing guide.
374
1037936
1662
17:19
Show the state that protecting wilderness
375
1039622
1983
17:21
not only makes ecological sense, but economic sense as well.
376
1041629
4087
17:26
It's a lot of fun, just do it -- put your feet in the water.
377
1046288
3327
17:29
The swamp will change you, I promise.
378
1049639
2514
17:33
Over the years, we've been so generous
379
1053351
1872
17:35
with these other landscapes around the country,
380
1055247
3070
17:38
cloaking them with this American pride,
381
1058341
2821
17:41
places that we now consider to define us:
382
1061186
2371
17:43
Grand Canyon, Yosemite, Yellowstone.
383
1063581
3125
17:46
And we use these parks and these natural areas
384
1066730
2409
17:49
as beacons and as cultural compasses.
385
1069163
3243
17:53
And sadly, the Everglades is very commonly
386
1073184
2045
17:55
left out of that conversation.
387
1075253
1916
17:57
But I believe it's every bit as iconic and emblematic
388
1077600
2508
18:00
of who we are as a country
389
1080132
1873
18:02
as any of these other wildernesses.
390
1082029
2501
18:04
It's just a different kind of wild.
391
1084554
2487
18:08
But I'm encouraged,
392
1088057
1327
18:09
because maybe we're finally starting to come around,
393
1089408
2694
18:12
because what was once deemed this swampy wasteland,
394
1092126
2587
18:14
today is a World Heritage site.
395
1094737
2063
18:17
It's a wetland of international importance.
396
1097404
2754
18:20
And we've come a long way in the last 60 years.
397
1100699
2803
18:23
And as the world's largest and most ambitious wetland restoration project,
398
1103526
4394
18:27
the international spotlight is on us in the Sunshine State.
399
1107944
4341
18:32
Because if we can heal this system,
400
1112309
1733
18:34
it's going to become an icon for wetland restoration
401
1114066
3449
18:37
all over the world.
402
1117539
1365
18:40
But it's up to us to decide which legacy we want to attach our flag to.
403
1120236
4546
18:45
They say that the Everglades is our greatest test.
404
1125508
3384
18:49
If we pass it, we get to keep the planet.
405
1129984
2670
18:53
I love that quote,
406
1133565
1403
18:54
because it's a challenge, it's a prod.
407
1134992
2033
18:57
Can we do it? Will we do it?
408
1137049
1879
18:58
We have to, we must.
409
1138952
1739
19:01
But the Everglades is not just a test.
410
1141507
1965
19:03
It's also a gift,
411
1143916
1619
19:05
and ultimately, our responsibility.
412
1145559
2867
19:08
Thank you.
413
1148959
1151
19:10
(Applause)
414
1150134
3866
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7