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Everglades National Park
Florida Panther: Species Profile
 
Photograph of the head of a Florida panther

Once common throughout the southeastern United States, fewer than 100 Florida panthers (Puma concolor coryi) are estimated to live in the wilds of south Florida today. The current range of Florida panthers is less than five percent of their original range across Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, and parts of Tennessee and South Carolina. Florida panthers were heavily hunted after 1832 when a bounty on panthers was created. Perceived as a threat to humans, livestock, and game animals, the species was nearly extinct by the mid-1950s.

Today, the primary threats to the remaining panther population are habitat loss, fragmentation, and degradation. Urban sprawl, the conversion of once-diversified agricultural lands into intensified industrial farming uses, and the loss of farmland to commercial development combine to reduce the amount of suitable panther habitat. Other factors include mortalities from collisions with automobiles, territorial disputes with other panthers, inbreeding, disease, and environmental toxins. All these other factors, however, also are related to habitat reduction.

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Photograph of Florida panther head
Florida panther
Learn more about Florida panthers
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Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow
Inventory of Threatened & Endangered Species
in South Florida National Parks
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American Woodstork
The Multi-Species Recovery Plan
for all South Florida listed species is available here
more...
Double-Crested Cormorant
Animals of the Everglades
Learn more here
more...
Did You Know?  

Did You Know?
The Everglades served as the backdrop for much of the military action during the Seminole Wars. The Seminole and Miccosukee people sought refuge within the isolated and relatively unknown expanse of land and water.

Last Updated: October 20, 2009 at 17:11 EST