Red and black mangrove are shown in this 21 May 2015 handout photo provided by Miami-Dade County on 29 June 2105, among debris from shoreline cleared for land to be used for the 2016 Miami International Boat Show in Miami, Florida. Photo: Miami-Dade County / Reuters

By Zachary Fagenson; Editing by Letitia Stein and Sandra Maler
29 June 2015 MIAMI, Florida (Reuters) – New revelations that a long strip of protected mangrove trees were illegally razed amid preparations for the 2016 Miami International Boat Show has outraged Florida environmentalists. The lost trees, critical to the marine ecosystem, were hacked away in mid-May by a Miami city contractor in advance of the five-day show expected to draw about 100,000 attendees and 1,500 boats. Environmental activists said in a letter to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers that staging the show in an environmentally sensitive region could violate a number of federal laws including the Endangered Species Act and the Clean Water Act. The federal agency is currently weighing permits for the boat show, slated to be held next February at the Miami Marine Stadium. “You’ve got sea grasses, corals, manatees, all sorts of protected birds,” said Mayra Peña Lindsay, mayor of nearby Key Biscayne, one of the show’s staunchest opponents.
 
The affluent city, on an island just outside Miami city limits, has hired a public relations firm to demand the National Marine Manufacturers Association move its event elsewhere. But the city of Miami, which has agreed to replant the trees that could take more than five years to grow to full size, continues to support the boat show. [more]

Protected Florida mangroves razed for boat show