MIAMI - The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has signed off on a plan to protect the endangered Cape Sable seaside sparrow. <br>
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The plan, signed by the Corps' top officer Wednesday in Atlanta, will raise the water level several inches in a major canal separating the Everglades marshes from the suburbs and farms of southwestern Miami-Dade. <br>
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Scientists say about 2,704 of the olive, yellow and white songbirds exist in the Everglades. The sparrow is called a Goldilocks bird because it needs water depths ``just right'' to lay eggs. <br>
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The Miccosukee Indian Tribe said the plan will flood 88,000 acres of tribal land and threaten another endangered bird, the snail kite. <br>
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Environmentalists, who have endorsed parts of the plan, said the rerouting of water could bring polluted farm runoff into the Everglades. <br>
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Local farmers said the higher water levels will increase the risk of field flooding. <br>
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``It's not the best of any of the worlds we deal with,'' said Richard Bonner, deputy district engineer of the Corps' Jacksonville office. ``It's a sort of compromise that still preserves all the rights of the individuals.'' <br>
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The plan will serve until long-delayed water projects are completed. It was endorsed by Miami-Dade County and the Wildlife Service after more than a year of debate. <br>
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Environmentalists fear the Cape Sable sparrow remains at risk to perish like its cousin, the dusky seaside sparrow. Some 1,900 duskies were alive in 1968, but a dozen years later the last wild dusky had perished.
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