Wednesday, November 29, 2006


10th panther
dies from
auto accident

Posted by Naples Daily News
on Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2006

A 10th Florida panther has been killed in a vehicle collision this year, tying a mark for the deadliest year on record for the big cats.
A female Florida panther was struck and killed on U.S. 41 East at around 11 p.m. Sunday between Manatee Road and Collier Boulevard, said Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologist Darrell Land in an e-mail.
The cat was not wearing a radio collar, nor did it have a transponder chip, so the panther's existence and location were unknown until its body was found. The panther was killed 1.5 miles east of Collier Boulevard within a few hundred yards of a middle school and an elementary school on a stretch of U.S. 41 that is slated to be widened from two to six lanes in coming years.
The roadkill record was set at 10 in 2003. Last year, nine panthers died after getting hit.
Scientists estimated between 70 and 100 Florida panthers are left, making the species one of the most endangered on the planet. Almost all of them live south of Lake Okeechobee.
Vehicle collisions are the top known killer of Florida panthers. Since 1972, 93 panthers have died on Florida's roads — 55 of those since 2000. This year, 10 panthers have been killed on highways, with the most recent being Sunday on U.S. 41 East between Manatee Road and Collier Boulevard.
In a separate report, six panthers have been struck in seven incidents in this same vicinity.
The reason for the discrepancy: A 4-year-old female panther was injured in a collision on July 11, 2004. After being nursed back to health for 10 months, the cat was released. Within two days, she returned to the bridge and was killed.

Saturday, November 25, 2006

water shortage

Saturday after Thanksgiving
Quiet in the neighborhood. The bounce house next door has disappeared for another year and the neighbor's driveway is no longer overflowing with family vehicles. We had a few days of cool-to-cold weather which seems to have put people in the "holiday" spirit. Today, it's gray, overcast and rainy. I can't complain though, because they're telling us we had the driest October on record and we're under voluntary water restrictions. Palm Beach County is under mandatory restrictions because Lake Okeechobee is very low ... lower than it should be.

I spend so many of my days talking to fourth and fifth grade students about water. Wetlands and how they work. Water pollution and what we can each do to prevent it. But, nowhere in my studies have I seen how to address the issue of water shortage. I think it might be time to dig in and do some research. If we've got the same amount of water on the planet all the time (in different forms, of course), then where is the water that used to be here going?

Think about it. Then, do something...