You’re certainly not limited when it comes to choosing the type of Everglades tours deprating from Fort Myers that you want to enjoy. For the Eco-friendly traveler it couldn’t be more convenient than to hop a tour vehicle in Fort Myers and ride down to the Everglades to have a firsthand experience with the most diverse types of eco-systems supported in Everglades National Park. The Everglades is like no other place on earth in that in this one area there are four separate eco-system habitats that are exclusive homes to thousands of wildlife inhabitants.

One of the four ecosystems you’ll see on an Everglades tours from Fort Myers is the sawgrass prairie. At one time this stretched from Lake Okeechobee all the way south to the end of the Park, but now is limited to the three water conservation areas and it ends at man-made canals. Much of the sawgrass in the prairie area is taller than six feet and is so tightly planted that it offers little diversity in wildlife, but further south is where the beginning of the Everglades food chain begins. It starts with algae in the wet prairie areas that feed small invertebrates that feed wading birds who continue to be stalked by land predators, and so the food chain progresses.

The Mangrove estuary is where you will find red, black, and white mangroves. The mangroves are what separate the prairies and the Florida Bay’s salt water. The most plentiful is the red mangrove which drops props into the water to form more trunks. The numerous roots of both the red and black mangroves not only produce great protected areas for fish and small crustaceans but keep the soil from eroding and maintain the land during the high surf and winds of hurricanes.

The Cypress swamp is a third eco-system one can see on an Everglades tour from Fort Myers. This area includes Big Cypress Swamp next to the Everglades Park and has a high number of endemic and endangered species. Many of the plants in the cypress swamp come from tropical places and because of the smaller communities there is a high diversity rate. Many botanists and plant lovers like this part of the Everglades for viewing bromelieads, and orchids.

The final ecosystem is the Pine Savannah. This area is the most threatened with endangered species of animals and plants. The pine savannah used to extend a great many miles but since the development of the Fort Lauderdale and Miami communities extended west, much of this area was destroyed. All that remains now is a small area in Everglades National Park that can be seen by Pine Key Trail.

If Everglades tours from Fort Myers interest you then don’t delay. As suburbia continues to impose itself on this great natural resource all the surrounding areas not protected in the Everglades National Park continue to decline. So don’t delay, make sure this year’s vacation includes the many eco-systems available in Everglades tours from Fort Myers.






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