Current:Home > NewsMore endangered Florida panthers have died in 2024 so far than all of last year: "These roadkills are heartbreaking" -Excel Wealth Summit
More endangered Florida panthers have died in 2024 so far than all of last year: "These roadkills are heartbreaking"
View
Date:2025-04-18 16:40:24
The 2024 calendar is not even at its halfway point but more endangered Florida panthers have died this year than in all of 2023, according to state statistics.
Of the 14 deaths in 2024, 11 involved vehicles and another was killed by a train. Two other deaths were of an "unknown" cause, according to statistics from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.
Experts say only between 120 and 230 adult panthers are left in Florida. Most live in South Florida, according to Elise Bennett, the Florida and Caribbean director at the Center for Biological Diversity. Factors like growing human populations and higher vehicular traffic in the panthers' limited habitat are part of the reason why so many of the endangered cats are killed, Bennett said.
"The reason it's so dangerous is because we have a growing human population and the infrastructure, the roads, the buildings, the higher traffic and higher speeds ... all of that is happening right in the heart of the last remaining occupied habitat for the Florida panther," Bennett said. "They've been kind of cornered into this little area of Southwest Florida, and that's where we see the majority of these roadkills."
While more panthers have died this year than last, Bennett said that it's still low for panther deaths. In 2021 and 2022, 27 panthers died each year. In 2020, 22 panthers died. Bennett said it's not clear why panther deaths were so low in 2023.
"It doesn't change the fact that these roadkills are heartbreaking and we really need to be doing everything we can to have less of them if we want our one remaining panther population to exist and eventually recover to a point where it doesn't need to be protected anymore," Bennett said.
Conservation efforts to protect the panther species are ongoing. Bennett said that for the species to no longer be considered endangered, there would need to be three distinct populations of 240 adult panthers each, something she said is a "long way to go." In an ideal world, panthers would be able to roam freely between all three populations, traversing the state to former habitats like north Florida and Georgia without significant risk. That's the goal of the Florida Wildlife Corridor, an initiative that "sets out to identify the most important places that we need to protect so that panthers actually have a way to move north and go back into their former range," said Bennett.
Bennett said that conservationists are hoping to find a happy medium between continued human population growth and the needs of the endangered panthers.
"It's really about making sure that when we have new development - we need places for people to live - that we do it in a compact way, that we're not sprawling out into important panther habitat, and that every step we're making isn't foreclosing the opportunity for the panthers to get back out into habitat that could help support them," she said.
- In:
- Endangered Species
- Florida
Kerry Breen is a News Editor at CBSNews.com. A graduate of New York University's Arthur L. Carter School of Journalism, she previously worked at NBC News' TODAY Digital. She covers current events, breaking news and issues including substance use.
TwitterveryGood! (5)
Related
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Fans drop everything, meet Taylor Swift in pouring rain at Hamburg Eras Tour show
- Adidas apologizes to Bella Hadid following backlash over shoe ad linked to 1972 Munich Olympics
- Famed guitarist Slash announces death of stepdaughter in heartfelt post: 'Sweet soul'
- 'Most Whopper
- Crowdstrike blames bug for letting bad data slip through, leading to global tech outage
- Teen killed by lightning on Germany's highest peak; family of 8 injured in separate strike
- Whale surfaces, capsizes fishing boat off New Hampshire coast
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- NHRA legend John Force released from rehab center one month after fiery crash
Ranking
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Nevada election officials ramp up voter roll maintenance ahead of November election
- Netanyahu is in Washington at a fraught time for Israel and the US. What to know about his visit
- Brandon Aiyuk reports to 49ers training camp despite contract extension impasse
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Wisconsin, in a first, to unveil a Black woman’s statue in its Capitol
- Suspected gunman in Croatia nursing home killings charged on 11 counts, including murder
- New owner nears purchase of Red Lobster after chain announced bankruptcy and closures
Recommendation
Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
SpongeBob SquarePants Is Autistic, Actor Tom Kenny Reveals
Why the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics are already an expensive nightmare for many locals and tourists
10 to watch: Beach volleyballer Chase Budinger wants to ‘shock the world’ at 2024 Olympics
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Fire Once Helped Sequoias Reproduce. Now, it’s Killing the Groves.
Fire Once Helped Sequoias Reproduce. Now, it’s Killing the Groves.
Keanu Reeves Shares Why He Thinks About Death All the Time