Stormwater treatment area

When they die, they decompose creating a sediment layer that continues to absorb and hold decades worth of phosphorus.

Water that flows out of the STAs into Everglades National Park has significantly lower levels of phosphorus than it did when it first entered.

[2] The Everglades is a delicate ecological system with a naturally low level of existing phosphorus, resulting in a landscape of sawgrass, wet prairies and tree islands that were well adapted to the low nutrient environment.

[3] Increasing levels of nutrients such as phosphorus can encourage the growth of invasive species, smothering and crowding out the natives.

[4] STAs have been implemented in key positions at the northern edge of the Everglades to help keep phosphorus laden water from reaching the park, but concerns remain that the already elevated phosphorus levels in both Lake Okeechobee and the Everglades Agricultural Area (both heavy contributors to nutrient laden runoff) are so high that phosphorus loads into the park could continue for many decades.

Stormwater Treatment Areas Location Map This map shows the locations of six Stormwater Treatment Areas