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The Lake Wales Ridge, 'Florida's Attic'
Exploring a Protected Habitat on ESA's 30th Anniversary

audio icon Listen to Christopher Joyce's report.
audio icon Biologist Hilary Swain discusses endangered species and the Florida scrub.

audio icon The call of the Florida scrub-jay.

Dec. 22, 2003 -- Thirty years ago this month, enactment of the Endangered Species Act helped foster the notion that people could stop animals and plants from becoming extinct. The Act stirred strong emotions by halting development in some places -- and it changed the way science is done. In the latest National Geographic Radio Expedition, NPR's Christopher Joyce visits Florida to take the measure of the Act's effects.

Biologist Hilary Swain runs the Archbold Biological Station on the Lake Wales Ridge in Central Florida. The Ridge, Swain explains, is "Florida's attic, where we have this assemblage of species and communities found really nowhere else on Earth."

In this scrub live more than 40 rare species of plants and animals. Many are protected by the Endangered Species Act. One of the most unusual is the Florida scrub-jay, a bird whose breeding behavior is more human than birdlike. There are only a few thousand of the sky-blue birds left. While they're related to the blue jay, the scrub-jays are different -- wary, yet unafraid.

When biologist and scrub-jay expert Glen Woolfenden started studying them decades ago, his main tools were binoculars, peanuts and leg bands for the birds. He says wildlife biology was mainly making sure there were enough deer for hunters to shoot.

Now younger colleagues at the station like biologist Reed Bowman use DNA to identify scrub-jay families, distinguish males from females, and track diseases like West Nile Virus. The Endangered Species Act encouraged new techniques like these, because it pushed the science beyond classifying and counting animals and plants, Joyce says.

"They don't call it conservation biology for nothing," Bowman says. "What do we need to know, how do these animals make their living, what are the kinds of habitats in which they can successfully make that living, and what were the processes that created that habitat?"

The Act elevated habitat to a much more important role. Biologists now must manage the environment that plants and animals live. For example, the staff at Archbold must regularly start fires to control overgrowth of forest that might otherwise obscure hawks that prey on the scrub-jay.

Swain says people "whiz by" such landscapes "without really ever understanding them." But, she says, "I think it would be... extraordinarily arrogant to describe ourselves in any way as gods of a landscape like this. We're at best stewards who are still naive and learning about management."


More Radio Expeditions and NPR Stories on Endangered Species

read more Search for the Ivory-billed Woodpecker

read more Fort Bragg's Woodpeckers

read more Profits, Demand Fuel Commerce in Endangered Species

read more Interior Secretary Gale Norton Discusses Bush Environmental Record

read more Debate Over 'Critical Habitat' Rule

read more Life on the Brink

read more Preserving Nepal's Endangered Species

read more Chang Tang's Endangered Antelope

Web Resources

Archbold Biological Station

The Endangered Species Program

Plants of the Florida Scrub




Florida scrub-jay The Florida scrub-jay is among the more than 100 species of the state's plants and animals that are protected by the federal Endangered Species Act.
Photos: Jessica Goldstein, NPR News


Hilary Swain Hilary Swain, a biologist and Scotswoman who came to America and fell in love with the Florida scrub.


The Florida scrub The Archbold Biological Station's nearly 9,000 acres are a refuge for the last big patch of Florida scrub.


Chris Valligny holds a scrub-jay. Archbold Research Assistant Chris Valligny demonstrates the correct way to hold the scrub-jay.


Reed Bowman retrieves a scrub-jay from a trap. Biologist Reed Bowman retrieves a scrub-jay from a trap baited with peanuts.


NPR's Chris Joyce releases a scrub-jay. NPR's Chris Joyce releases a scrub-jay.
View complete image


Map of the Lake Wales Ridge. The Archbold Biological Station is at the southern tip of the Lake Wales Ridge, which stretches through Central Florida.
Map: Roberta L. Pickert, Copyright 1997 Archbold Biological Station
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