Florida Wildlife Corridor Foundation

2018 Heartland to Headwaters

The Wild Divide

The Last Green Thread

2018 Heartland to Headwaters Expedition: Corridor at a Crossroads

Protection for Connection

With 1,000 new residents moving to Florida every day, development and transportation infrastructure are consuming natural and agricultural lands at a rate of 20 acres per hour. Roads like Interstate 4, while vital to the movement of people, create hard barriers to the movement of wildlife and water.

The remaining wild areas between Tampa and Orlando are quickly becoming isolated. Only three potential natural connection points remain linking the Everglades Headwaters south of I-4 to the Green Swamp north of I-4. As the two most extensive wetlands in the state, they provide freshwater flow to nearly 15 million Floridians.

The mission of the 2018 Florida Wildlife Corridor Expedition was to navigate and document one chokepoint of the Corridor that can possibly still be saved. By exploring this narrow, but critical, connection we issue a call to action for additional conservation to protect and restore this remaining wild thread within a growing urban interface.

Why The Expedition?

The Last Green Thread

Expedition Team

Mallory Lykes Dimmitt
CONSERVATIONIST
Carlton Ward
CONSERVATION PHOTOGRAPHER
Joe Guthrie
WILDLIFE BIOLOGIST
Danny Schmidt
DIRECTOR | PRODUCER
Eric Bendick
DIRECTOR | PRODUCER

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