With their garish blooms, there's something special about orchids, and in the U.S., no place has more native species than Fakahatchee Strand Preserve. The state park in Southwest Florida was the setting for the 1998 book The Orchid Thief. Scientists there are working to bring back varieties lost through the years to poachers and habitat destruction.

If you visit Fakahatchee, you likely will run into park biologist Mike Owen. He has spent most of his career there, though he says that's not as significant as it sounds.

"The ecosystem is 5,000 years old," he says, "so 22 years is maybe a wink in that time span."

This type of shallow swamp is found only in Florida, and Fakahatchee is the largest. Water drains south from Lake Okeechobee through stands of cypress trees with thick, 100-foot-tall canopies.

To see orchids in their native habitat, Owen takes visitors on swamp walks. We step off a park trail and are soon wading through sawgrass and water 9 inches deep. Owen is wearing rubber boots and carrying a depth gauge that doubles as a walking stick. "Notice how clear that water is," he says.

Owen was author Susan Orlean's guide in Fakahatchee when she wrote The Orchid Thief. Orchids, Owen says, are especially susceptible to poachers.

"The orchids have an allure," he says. "And some people just take it on themselves to go out there and just take whatever they want."

Logging also has taken a toll on Fakahatchee: In the 1940s and 1950s, most of the old-growth cypress was cut down. But since the '70s, when it became a state park, the swamp and the stately cypress trees largely have recovered.

We leave the sawgrass prairie and slosh into a stand of trees, mostly palms and cypress.

"This is a small cypress dome," Owen says. "This was one of the sites of our cowhorn orchid restoration project."

Over the past decade, working in partnership with the Atlanta Botanical Garden, scientists at Fakahatchee Strand have harvested seeds in the wild, cultivated cowhorn orchids and replanted them throughout the swamp.

The cowhorn, like many orchids, thrives by growing on tree trunks and limbs — and also like many orchids, when they mature they look spectacular.

"They can have literally hundreds of flowers — little yellow flowers with little dots on them, Owen says. "Well, because it is so charismatic and easy to find, people did remove them."

When the project started a decade ago, just 17 cowhorn orchids still could be found in the 85,000-acre park. Today, there are several hundred. Scientists at Fakahatchee had similar success with another endangered species, the dollar orchid.

Two other orchids that used to grow in Fakahatchee are no longer found anywhere in Florida: the rat-tail orchid and one known only by its scientific name, Epidendrum acunae. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologist Dennis Giardina says that, for him and Mike Owen, finding them became a passion.

"There has been a lot of time and effort and energy spent looking for these lost orchids, so we're pretty certain that they are in fact locally extinct," Giardina says.

Using techniques they pioneered with the cowhorn orchid, Giardina and Owen were convinced that they could restore the lost orchids to Fakahatchee if they could find nearby plants. The likeliest place to look was Cuba, just 200 miles away.

At a conference in Cuba three years ago, Giardina met with botanists from the island. As he showed his final slide, he appealed directly to the Cuban scientists in his audience: "The closest populations of these two species occur in western Cuba. Please help us. Please collaborate with us, because we want to try to bring these orchids back."

The Cuban researchers were willing and helpful — and as it turned out, had both species at the botanical garden and had been monitoring other populations in the wild.

It will take time, a decade or more, but Giardina says now he and Mike Owen are confident that, with seeds from Cuba, they'll be able to bring the lost orchids back to Fakahatchee Strand.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

And now we're going to go to a swamp in Florida in the Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park. We're going there because the park has the most native species of orchids in the U.S. - think the setting for the book "The Orchid Thief." Over the years, many varieties of orchids have been lost because of poachers and habitat destruction. And scientists want to bring them back and they are looking to Cuba for help. NPR's Greg Allen waded through the swamp and sent this report.

GREG ALLEN, BYLINE: If you visit Fakahatchee Strand, you'll likely run into park biologist Mike Owen. He's spent most of his career there - 22 years - studying a place that's truly unique.

MIKE OWEN: And, you know, the ecosystem is 5,000 years old, so 22 years is maybe a wink (laughter) you know, in that time span.

ALLEN: Fakahatchee is the largest strand swamp in the world. That's a type of shallow swamp found only in Florida where water drains south from Lake Okeechobee through stands of cypress trees with thick 100-foot tall canopies. To see orchids in their native habitat, Owen takes visitors on swamp walks.

OWEN: A little bit of sawgrass right here inside the ditch.

ALLEN: We step off a park trail and are soon wading through sawgrass and water nine inches deep.

OWEN: And notice how clear that water is.

ALLEN: Twenty years ago, Owen was author Susan Orlean's guide in Fakahatchee when she wrote her book "The Orchid Thief." Orchids, Owen says, are especially susceptible to poachers - people who illegally take plants from the reserve.

OWEN: The orchids have an allure, and some people just take it upon themselves to go out there and just take whatever they want.

ALLEN: Logging also took a toll on Fakahatchee. In the '40s and '50s, most of the old growth cypress was cut down. But since the '70s, when it became a state park, the swamp and the stately cypress trees have largely recovered. We leave the sawgrass prairie and slosh into a stand of trees, mostly palms and cypress.

OWEN: This is a small cypress dome. And this is one of the sites of our cowhorn orchid restoration project.

ALLEN: Over the last decade, working in partnership with the Atlanta Botanical Garden, scientists at Fakahatchee Strand have harvested seeds in the wild and cultivated cowhorn orchids that they replanted throughout the swamp. The cowhorn, like many orchids, thrive by growing on tree trunks and limbs. When they're mature with flower, Owen says, cowhorns are spectacular.

OWEN: When these plants bloom, usually in March or April, they can have literally hundreds of flowers, little yellow flowers with little dots on them. Well, because it is so charismatic and easy to find, people did remove them.

ALLEN: When the project started a decade ago, just 17 cowhorn orchids could still be found in the 85,000-acre park. Today, because of the project, there are several hundred. But there are two other orchids that used to grow in Fakahatchee but now are no longer found there or anywhere in Florida. One is the rattail orchid. The other is known only by its scientific name - Epidendrum acunae. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologist Dennis Giardina says, for him and Mike Owen, finding them became a passion.

DENNIS GIARDINA: There has been a lot of time and effort and energy spent looking for these lost orchids, especially in the areas where they were last documented. So we're pretty certain that they are in fact locally extinct.

ALLEN: Using techniques they pioneered with the cowhorn orchid, Giardina and Owen were convinced that they could restore the lost orchids to Fakahatchee if they could find nearby plants. The likeliest place to look was Cuba, just 200 miles away. At a conference in Cuba three years ago, Giardina met with botanists from the island. He recalls his pitch.

GIARDINA: The closest populations of these two species occur in western Cuba. Please help us. Please collaborate with us because we want to try to bring these orchids back.

ALLEN: Cuban researchers were willing and helpful. As it turned out, they had both species at the botanical garden and have been monitoring other populations in the wild. It will take time, a decade or more, but Giardina says now he and Mike Owen are confident that with help of seed from Cuba, they'll be able to bring back the lost orchids to Fakahatchee Strand. Greg Allen, NPR News, Miami. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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