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====Everglades Agricultural Area==== {{See also|Draining and development of the Everglades#Everglades Agricultural Area}} [[File:Everglades canal.jpg|thumb|A 2003 U.S. Geological Survey photo showing the border between Water Conservation Area 3 (bottom) with water, and [[Everglades National Park]], dry (top)]] The C&SF established {{convert|470000|acre|km2}} for the Everglades Agricultural Areaβ27 percent of the Everglades prior to development.<ref>Lodge, p. 223.</ref> In the late 1920s, agricultural experiments indicated that adding large amounts of [[manganese sulfate]] to Everglades muck produced a profitable harvest for vegetables.<ref>McCally, pp. 159β160.</ref> The primary cash crop in the EAA is sugarcane, though [[sod]], beans, lettuce, celery, and rice are also grown. Fields in the EAA are typically {{convert|40|acre|m2}}, bordered by canals on two sides, that are connected to larger canals where water is pumped in or out depending on the needs of the crops.<ref>Lodge, pp. 225β226.</ref> The fertilizers used on vegetables, along with high concentrations of [[nitrogen]] and [[phosphorus]] that are the byproduct of decayed soil necessary for sugarcane production, were pumped into WCAs south of the EAA. The introduction of large amounts of these chemicals provided opportunities for exotic plants to take hold in the Everglades.<ref>McCally, pp. 172β173.</ref> One of the defining characteristics of natural Everglades ecology is its ability to support itself in a nutrient-poor environment, and the introduction of fertilizers began to alter the plant life in the region.<ref>Grunwald, pp. 283β284.</ref>
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