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| Environment
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| Home > Regional Resolves>Regional Priorities>Environment
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Environment - Protecting our Natural Resources
Central Florida has long been treasured for its beautiful environment. White, sandy beaches, diverse ecosystems, and a wide variety of plants and animals make our community an exciting place to live and visit. However, decades of rapid growth and poor resource management are threatening Central Florida’s natural resources and financial future. To sustain environmental and economic prosperity, we must alter our region’s destiny by making collaborative decisions that encourage ecologic responsibility and foster environmental excellence.
Imagine a thriving region rich in indigenous plants and animals, diverse recreational opportunities within 20 minutes of every doorstep, and a new level of tourism based on outdoor adventure. It’s possible – thanks to Central Florida leaders. By establishing a collective vision for our natural landscape and the human communities inhabiting it, we’re building a cooperative regional conservation program to protect Central Florida’s environment and economy for generations to come.
Led by the University of Central Florida Metropolitan Center for Regional Studies – a forum for addressing key issues of concern in our community – myregion.org is collaborating with community leaders to encourage partnerships that foster environmental responsibility. Known as Naturally Central Florida, this seven-county coalition is working to safeguard Florida’s natural assets:
• Working to create a greater public knowledge, awareness and appreciation of Central Florida's valuable natural assets • Distributing a position paper that addresses economic benefits along with key threats, opportunities, and land conservation values • Creating a natural area network that attracts scientific researchers and students to study Florida’s unique resources • Developing and implementing a land-acquisition strategy that increases the value of the region’s natural assets and links areas of regional and national significance • Ensuring that living examples of all of Central Florida’s natural habitats exist to benefit future generations • Enhancing landscapes and linkages with scenic, historic, recreational, and agricultural open-space buffers • Protecting regional groundwater supplies, rivers, lakes and springs by maintaining critical wetland systems • Preserving our valuable ocean and estuarine resources
By working together, we can create greater public knowledge, awareness, and appreciation of Central Florida’s valuable natural assets. In doing so, the region will prosper, along with all of us who call Central Florida home.
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Naturally Central Florida: Fitting the Pieces Together is the first document in a community process to protect and sustain the exceptional ecosystems of Central Florida. Seven “jewels of our natural world” in Central Florida are identified and showcased. These are “must save” places with regional, national, (and in some cases) global ecological and economic value that benefit Florida and the Nation.
Greater Kissimmee Prairie St. Johns/Econ River Corridor Green Swamp Indian River Lagoon Blueway Wekiva - Ocala Greenway Volusia Conservation Corridor Lake Wales Ridge
Regional Indicators - Orange County uses the most total amount of reclaimed water per day in the region at more than 80 million gallons, but Seminole County uses the most gallons per day per person at more than 110 gallons per individual.
- The creation of a Conservation Land Acquisition Program in Osceola County in 2004 meant that all seven counties in the Central Florida Region now have such a program.
- Green Turtle nesting in Central Florida increased between 1988 and 2003 while Loggerhead Turtle nesting declined slightly.
The Central Florida Regional Indicators Report was created to help gauge the current status of the region in a variety of areas.
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