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

87,771 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
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of traveling to some incredible places,
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photographing these distant landscapes and remote cultures
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all over the world.
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I love my job.
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But people think it's this string of epiphanies
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and sunrises and rainbows,
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when in reality, it looks more something like this.
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(Laughter)
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This is my office.
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We can't afford the fanciest places to stay at night,
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so we tend to sleep a lot outdoors.
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As long as we can stay dry,
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that's a bonus.
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We also can't afford the fanciest restaurants.
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So we tend to eat whatever's on the local menu.
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And if you're in the Ecuadorian Páramo,
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you're going to eat a large rodent called a cuy.
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(Laughter)
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But what makes our experiences perhaps a little bit different
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and a little more unique than that of the average person
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is that we have this gnawing thing in the back of our mind
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that even in our darkest moments, and those times of despair,
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we think, "Hey, there might be an image to be made here,
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there might be a story to be told."
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And why is storytelling important?
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Well, it helps us to connect with our cultural and our natural heritage.
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And in the Southeast,
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there's an alarming disconnect between the public
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and the natural areas that allow us to be here in the first place.
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We're visual creatures,
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so we use what we see to teach us what we know.
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Now the majority of us aren't going to willingly go
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way down to a swamp.
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So how can we still expect those same people to then advocate
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on behalf of their protection?
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We can't.
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So my job, then, is to use photography as a communication tool,
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to help bridge the gap between the science and the aesthetics,
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to get people talking,
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to get them thinking,
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and to hopefully, ultimately,
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get them caring.
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I started doing this 15 years ago right here in Gainesville,
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right here in my backyard.
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And I fell in love with adventure and discovery,
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going to explore all these different places
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that were just minutes from my front doorstep.
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There are a lot of beautiful places to find.
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Despite all these years that have passed,
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I still see the world through the eyes of a child
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and I try to incorporate that sense of wonderment
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and that sense of curiosity into my photography
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as often as I can.
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And we're pretty lucky because here in the South,
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we're still blessed with a relatively blank canvas
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that we can fill with the most fanciful adventures
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and incredible experiences.
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It's just a matter of how far our imagination will take us.
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See, a lot of people look at this and they say,
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"Oh yeah, wow, that's a pretty tree."
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But I don't just see a tree --
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I look at this and I see opportunity.
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I see an entire weekend.
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Because when I was a kid, these were the types of images
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that got me off the sofa and dared me to explore,
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dared me to go find the woods
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and put my head underwater and see what we have.
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And folks, I've been photographing all over the world
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and I promise you,
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what we have here in the South,
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what we have in the Sunshine State,
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rivals anything else that I've seen.
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But yet our tourism industry is busy promoting all the wrong things.
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Before most kids are 12, they'll have been to Disney World
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more times than they've been in a canoe
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or camping under a starry sky.
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And I have nothing against Disney or Mickey; I used to go there, too.
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But they're missing out on those fundamental connections
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that create a real sense of pride and ownership
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for the place that they call home.
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And this is compounded by the issue that the landscapes
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that define our natural heritage
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and fuel our aquifer for our drinking water
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have been deemed as scary and dangerous and spooky.
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When our ancestors first came here,
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they warned, "Stay out of these areas, they're haunted.
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They're full of evil spirits and ghosts."
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I don't know where they came up with that idea.
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But it's actually led to a very real disconnect,
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a very real negative mentality
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that has kept the public disinterested, silent,
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and ultimately, our environment at risk.
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We're a state that's surrounded and defined by water,
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and yet for centuries,
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swamps and wetlands have been regarded
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as these obstacles to overcome.
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And so we've treated them as these second-class ecosystems,
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because they have very little monetary value
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and of course, they're known to harbor alligators and snakes --
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which, I'll admit, these aren't the most cuddly of ambassadors.
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(Laughter)
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So it became assumed, then, that the only good swamp
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was a drained swamp.
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And in fact,
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draining a swamp to make way for agriculture and development
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was considered the very essence of conservation not too long ago.
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But now we're backpedaling,
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because the more we come to learn about these sodden landscapes,
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the more secrets we're starting to unlock
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about interspecies relationships
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and the connectivity of habitats, watersheds and flyways.
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Take this bird, for example:
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this is the prothonotary warbler.
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I love this bird because it's a swamp bird,
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through and through, a swamp bird.
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They nest and they mate and they breed in these old-growth swamps
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in these flooded forests.
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And so after the spring, after they raise their young,
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they then fly thousand of miles over the Gulf of Mexico
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into Central and South America.
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And then after the winter,
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the spring rolls around and they come back.
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They fly thousands of miles over the Gulf of Mexico.
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And where do they go? Where do they land?
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Right back in the same tree.
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That's nuts.
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This is a bird the size of a tennis ball --
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I mean, that's crazy!
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I used a GPS to get here today,
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and this is my hometown.
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(Laughter)
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It's crazy.
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So what happens, then, when this bird flies over the Gulf of Mexico
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into Central America for the winter
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and then the spring rolls around and it flies back,
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and it comes back to this:
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a freshly sodded golf course?
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This is a narrative that's all too commonly unraveling
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here in this state.
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And this is a natural process that's occurred for thousands of years
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and we're just now learning about it.
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So you can imagine all else we have to learn about these landscapes
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if we just preserve them first.
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Now despite all this rich life that abounds in these swamps,
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they still have a bad name.
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Many people feel uncomfortable with the idea of wading
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into Florida's blackwater.
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I can understand that.
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But what I loved about growing up in the Sunshine State
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is that for so many of us,
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we live with this latent but very palpable fear
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that when we put our toes into the water,
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there might be something much more ancient
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and much more adapted than we are.
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Knowing that you're not top dog is a welcomed discomfort, I think.
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How often in this modern and urban and digital age
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do you actually get the chance to feel vulnerable,
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or consider that the world may not have been made for just us?
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So for the last decade,
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I began seeking out these areas where the concrete yields to forest
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and the pines turn to cypress,
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and I viewed all these mosquitoes and reptiles,
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all these discomforts,
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as affirmations that I'd found true wilderness,
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and I embrace them wholly.
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Now as a conservation photographer obsessed with blackwater,
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it's only fitting that I'd eventually end up
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in the most famous swamp of all:
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the Everglades.
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Growing up here in North Central Florida,
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it always had these enchanted names,
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places like Loxahatchee and Fakahatchee,
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Corkscrew, Big Cypress.
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I started what turned into a five-year project
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to hopefully reintroduce the Everglades in a new light,
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in a more inspired light.
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But I knew this would be a tall order, because here you have an area
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that's roughly a third the size the state of Florida, it's huge.
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And when I say Everglades,
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most people are like, "Oh, yeah, the national park."
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But the Everglades is not just a park; it's an entire watershed,
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starting with the Kissimmee chain of lakes in the north,
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and then as the rains would fall in the summer,
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these downpours would flow into Lake Okeechobee,
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and Lake Okeechobee would fill up and it would overflow its banks
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and spill southward, ever slowly, with the topography,
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and get into the river of grass, the Sawgrass Prairies,
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before meting into the cypress slews,
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until going further south into the mangrove swamps,
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and then finally -- finally -- reaching Florida Bay,
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the emerald gem of the Everglades,
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the great estuary,
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the 850 square-mile estuary.
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So sure, the national park is the southern end of this system,
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but all the things that make it unique are these inputs that come in,
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the fresh water that starts 100 miles north.
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So no manner of these political or invisible boundaries
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protect the park from polluted water or insufficient water.
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And unfortunately, that's precisely what we've done.
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Over the last 60 years,
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we have drained, we have dammed, we have dredged the Everglades
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to where now only one third of the water that used to reach the bay
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now reaches the bay today.
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So this story is not all sunshine and rainbows, unfortunately.
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For better or for worse,
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the story of the Everglades is intrinsically tied
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to the peaks and the valleys of mankind's relationship
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with the natural world.
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But I'll show you these beautiful pictures,
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because it gets you on board.
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And while I have your attention, I can tell you the real story.
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It's that we're taking this,
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and we're trading it for this,
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at an alarming rate.
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And what's lost on so many people
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is the sheer scale of which we're discussing.
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Because the Everglades is not just responsible for the drinking water
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for 7 million Floridians;
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today it also provides the agricultural fields
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for the year-round tomatoes and oranges
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for over 300 million Americans.
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And it's that same seasonal pulse of water in the summer
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that built the river of grass 6,000 years ago.
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Ironically, today, it's also responsible for the over half a million acres
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of the endless river of sugarcane.
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These are the same fields that are responsible
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for dumping exceedingly high levels of fertilizers into the watershed,
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forever changing the system.
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But in order for you to not just understand how this system works,
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but to also get personally connected to it,
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I decided to break the story down into several different narratives.
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And I wanted that story to start in Lake Okeechobee,
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the beating heart of the Everglade system.
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And to do that, I picked an ambassador,
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an iconic species.
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This is the Everglade snail kite.
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It's a great bird,
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and they used to nest in the thousands,
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thousands in the northern Everglades.
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And then they've gone down to about 400 nesting pairs today.
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And why is that?
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Well, it's because they eat one source of food, an apple snail,
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about the size of a ping-pong ball, an aquatic gastropod.
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So as we started damming up the Everglades,
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as we started diking Lake Okeechobee and draining the wetlands,
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we lost the habitat for the snail.
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And thus, the population of the kites declined.
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And so, I wanted a photo that would not only communicate this relationship
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between wetland, snail and bird,
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but I also wanted a photo that would communicate
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how incredible this relationship was,
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and how very important it is that they've come to depend on each other,
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this healthy wetland and this bird.
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And to do that, I brainstormed this idea.
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I started sketching out these plans to make a photo,
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and I sent it to the wildlife biologist down in Okeechobee --
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this is an endangered bird, so it takes special permission to do.
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So I built this submerged platform
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that would hold snails just right under the water.
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And I spent months planning this crazy idea.
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And I took this platform down to Lake Okeechobee
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and I spent over a week in the water,
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wading waist-deep, 9-hour shifts from dawn until dusk,
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to get one image that I thought might communicate this.
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And here's the day that it finally worked:
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[Video: (Mac Stone narrating) After setting up the platform,
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I look off and I see a kite coming over the cattails.
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And I see him scanning and searching.
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And he gets right over the trap,
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and I see that he's seen it.
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And he beelines, he goes straight for the trap.
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And in that moment, all those months of planning, waiting,
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all the sunburn, mosquito bites --
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suddenly, they're all worth it.
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(Mac Stone in film) Oh my gosh, I can't believe it!]
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You can believe how excited I was when that happened.
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But what the idea was,
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is that for someone who's never seen this bird
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and has no reason to care about it,
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these photos, these new perspectives,
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will help shed a little new light on just one species
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that makes this watershed so incredible, so valuable, so important.
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Now, I know I can't come here to Gainesville
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and talk to you about animals in the Everglades
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without talking about gators.
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I love gators, I grew up loving gators.
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My parents always said I had an unhealthy relationship with gators.
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But what I like about them is,
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they're like the freshwater equivalent of sharks.
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They're feared, they're hated,
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and they are tragically misunderstood.
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Because these are a unique species, they're not just apex predators.
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In the Everglades,
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they are the very architects of the Everglades,
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because as the water drops down in the winter
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during the dry season,
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they start excavating these holes called gator holes.
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And they do this because as the water drops down,
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they'll be able to stay wet and they'll be able to forage.
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And now this isn't just affecting them,
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other animals also depend on this relationship,
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so they become a keystone species as well.
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So how do you make an apex predator, an ancient reptile,
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at once look like it dominates the system,
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but at the same time, look vulnerable?
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Well, you wade into a pit of about 120 of them,
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then you hope that you've made the right decision.
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(Laughter)
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I still have all my fingers, it's cool.
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But I understand, I know I'm not going to rally you guys,
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I'm not going to rally the troops to "Save the Everglades for the gators!"
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It won't happen because they're so ubiquitous,
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we see them now,
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they're one of the great conservation success stories of the US.
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But there is one species in the Everglades that no matter who you are,
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you can't help but love, too, and that's the roseate spoonbill.
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These birds are great, but they've had a really tough time in the Everglades,
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because they started out with thousands of nesting pairs in Florida Bay,
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and at the turn of the 20th century,
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they got down to two -- two nesting pairs.
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And why?
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That's because women thought they looked better on their hats
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then they did flying in the sky.
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Then we banned the plume trade,
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and their numbers started rebounding.
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And as their numbers started rebounding,
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scientists began to pay attention,
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they started studying these birds.
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And what they found out is that
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these birds' behavior is intrinsically tied
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to the annual draw-down cycle of water in the Everglades,
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the thing that defines the Everglades watershed.
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What they found out is that
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these birds started nesting in the winter as the water drew down,
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because they're tactile feeders, so they have to touch whatever they eat.
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And so they wait for these concentrated pools of fish
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to be able to feed enough to feed their young.
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So these birds became the very icon of the Everglades --
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an indicator species of the overall health of the system.
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And just as their numbers were rebounding in the mid-20th century --
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shooting up to 900, 1,000, 1,100, 1,200 --
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just as that started happening, we started draining the southern Everglades.
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And we stopped two-thirds of that water from moving south.
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And it had drastic consequences.
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And just as those numbers started reaching their peak,
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unfortunately, today, the real spoonbill story,
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16:01
the real photo of what it looks like is more something like this.
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16:07
And we're down to less than 70 nesting pairs in Florida Bay today,
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because we've disrupted the system so much.
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So all these different organizations are shouting, they're screaming,
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16:17
"The Everglades is fragile! It's fragile!"
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It is not.
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16:20
It is resilient.
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Because despite all we've taken, despite all we've done and we've drained
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16:25
and we've dammed and we've dredged it,
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16:27
pieces of it are still here, waiting to be put back together.
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16:30
And this is what I've loved about South Florida,
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that in one place, you have this unstoppable force of mankind
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16:36
meeting the immovable object of tropical nature.
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16:40
And it's at this new frontier that we are forced with a new appraisal.
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What is wilderness worth?
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16:47
What is the value of biodiversity, or our drinking water?
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16:51
And fortunately, after decades of debate,
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we're finally starting to act on those questions.
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16:56
We're slowly undertaking these projects
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16:59
to bring more freshwater back to the bay.
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17:01
But it's up to us as citizens, as residents, as stewards
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17:05
to hold our elected officials to their promises.
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17:09
What can you do to help?
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It's so easy.
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Just get outside, get out there.
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17:14
Take your friends out, take your kids out,
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take your family out.
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17:17
Hire a fishing guide.
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17:19
Show the state that protecting wilderness
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17:21
not only makes ecological sense, but economic sense as well.
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17:26
It's a lot of fun, just do it -- put your feet in the water.
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17:29
The swamp will change you, I promise.
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17:33
Over the years, we've been so generous
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17:35
with these other landscapes around the country,
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17:38
cloaking them with this American pride,
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places that we now consider to define us:
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17:43
Grand Canyon, Yosemite, Yellowstone.
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17:46
And we use these parks and these natural areas
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as beacons and as cultural compasses.
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And sadly, the Everglades is very commonly
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left out of that conversation.
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But I believe it's every bit as iconic and emblematic
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of who we are as a country
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18:02
as any of these other wildernesses.
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It's just a different kind of wild.
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18:08
But I'm encouraged,
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18:09
because maybe we're finally starting to come around,
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because what was once deemed this swampy wasteland,
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today is a World Heritage site.
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It's a wetland of international importance.
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And we've come a long way in the last 60 years.
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And as the world's largest and most ambitious wetland restoration project,
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the international spotlight is on us in the Sunshine State.
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Because if we can heal this system,
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it's going to become an icon for wetland restoration
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all over the world.
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But it's up to us to decide which legacy we want to attach our flag to.
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They say that the Everglades is our greatest test.
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18:49
If we pass it, we get to keep the planet.
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I love that quote,
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because it's a challenge, it's a prod.
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Can we do it? Will we do it?
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We have to, we must.
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But the Everglades is not just a test.
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19:03
It's also a gift,
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and ultimately, our responsibility.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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