With lead management responsibility for 1.5 million acres in Florida,
FWC staff have developed and implemented various types of restoration
projects statewide. There are three aspects to restoration on FWC
managed lands, hydrologic restoration, ground cover restoration,
and exotic species control. The state map details which counties are in
which FWC region and the three links provide project information by
region.

Hydrologic Restoration
Hydrologic restoration begins with an assessment of the property to
determine where basins/sub-basins are located and how water should
naturally flow across the property. After the assessment, recommended
structures and projects are implemented and then the hydrology of the
site is monitored to ensure that the structures are working properly.
Ground Cover Restoration
Ground cover restoration focuses on areas of a property that have been
altered from the native vegetation to non-native or off-site vegetation,
which has damaged, degraded, or destroyed the native ground cover that
once existed. As with hydrologic restoration, these projects begin with
a site assessment and then a restoration plan is written and
implemented. Recovery of the ground cover is monitored and adaptive
management is applied as necessary.
Exotic Species Control
Exotic species control is a continuous effort for FWC staff, especially
with the neighboring urban/suburban growth rates that surround FWC
managed lands. Control efforts begin with a site assessment
to determine where exotics occur and at what densities. Each WMA may
have their own specific problems, but solutions to controlling exotics
are typically similar.