Bar-B Ranch Conservation Easement Protects Everglades
Summary
Florida DEP secured a 1,668-acre conservation easement over Bar-B Ranch in Martin County through the Florida Forever Program. The easement permanently protects a working cattle ranch that supports Everglades restoration by storing and filtering water while preventing future development. This acquisition was approved by Governor DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet.
What changed
Florida DEP finalized a conservation easement on 1,668 acres at Bar-B Ranch, a working cattle operation with approximately 250 head of cattle. The land lies near the C-44 Stormwater Treatment Area and Allapattah Flats Wildlife Management Area, helping store and filter water before it reaches the St. Lucie River Estuary, Indian River Lagoon, Lake Okeechobee, and Greater Everglades. The property also lies within the Florida Wildlife Corridor, maintaining habitat connectivity.
This is a routine announcement of a completed conservation transaction. No action is required from other entities. The Florida Forever Program has committed over $1.5 billion since 2019 to acquire more than 500,000 acres for conservation, with 55% being conservation easements.
Source document (simplified)
Florida Forever Secures Bar-B Ranch Conservation Easement Safeguarding Working Lands While Advancing Everglades Restoration
Florida Department of Environmental Protection sent this bulletin at 03/30/2026 12:19 PM EDT
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| ## FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 30, 2026
CONTACT: DEP Press Office, 850-245-2112, DEPNews@FloridaDEP.gov
Florida Forever Secures Bar-B Ranch Conservation Easement Safeguarding Working Lands While Advancing Everglades Restoration
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Bar-B Ranch Florida Forever Project \| Lauren Yoho/Wildpath
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has secured a 1,668-acre conservation easement over Bar-B Ranch in Martin County through the Florida Forever Program, protecting a working cattle ranch that improves water quality and supports Everglades restoration while remaining in agricultural production.
Located near the C-44 Stormwater Treatment Area and Allapattah Flats Wildlife Management Area, Bar-B Ranch has been operated as a ranch for decades and currently supports approximately 250 head of cattle. The conservation easement ensures the land will remain a working ranch while permanently preventing future development.
The property was identified for acquisition as a key part of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan, where protecting strategic lands helps restore natural water storage and improve water quality flowing south through the Everglades system .
“Conservation easements through Florida Forever keep working lands in agriculture while protecting the natural functions that support our environment,” said DEP Secretary Alexis A. Lambert. “At Bar-B Ranch, protecting a working ranch also protects critical water flows, wetland functions and wildlife corridors, showing how agricultural lands and Everglades restoration can support each other.”
Bar-B Ranch helps store and filter water before it reaches downstream ecosystems, including the St. Lucie River Estuary, the Indian River Lagoon, Lake Okeechobee and ultimately the Greater Everglades. Protecting this land ensures its natural ability to store and cleanse water remains intact while preventing development that could threaten these vital ecological functions.
The property also lies within the Florida Wildlife Corridor, helping maintain important habitat connectivity across the region.
This acquisition was approved by Governor Ron DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet during a previous Cabinet meeting.
Florida is at the forefront of the nation’s land protection efforts and continues to serve as a model for other conservation programs across the country. Through the Florida Forever Program, the state conserves land that provides environmental, recreational and preservation benefits, including water quality and quantity safeguards; resilience from storm impacts; habitat and species protections; national security and outdoor recreation opportunities.
Since 2019, the state has committed more than $1.5 billion to the Florida Forever Program. This funding has enabled DEP to acquire over 500,000 acres for conservation, 55% of which are conservation easements.
For more information about the Florida Forever Program, visit FloridaForever.org.
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| ## About the Florida Department of Environmental Protection
The Florida Department of Environmental Protection is the state’s principal environmental agency, created to protect, conserve and manage Florida’s environment and natural resources. The department enforces federal and state environmental laws, protects Florida’s air and water quality, cleans up pollution, regulates solid waste management, promotes pollution prevention and acquires environmentally sensitive lands for preservation. The agency also maintains a statewide system of parks, trails and aquatic preserves. Visit the department’s website at FloridaDEP.gov.
https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/FLDEP/bulletins/410a6e3 | | | | ## FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 30, 2026
CONTACT: DEP Press Office, 850-245-2112, DEPNews@FloridaDEP.gov
Florida Forever Secures Bar-B Ranch Conservation Easement Safeguarding Working Lands While Advancing Everglades Restoration
| |
Bar-B Ranch Florida Forever Project | Lauren Yoho/Wildpath
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has secured a 1,668-acre conservation easement over Bar-B Ranch in Martin County through the Florida Forever Program, protecting a working cattle ranch that improves water quality and supports Everglades restoration while remaining in agricultural production.
Located near the C-44 Stormwater Treatment Area and Allapattah Flats Wildlife Management Area, Bar-B Ranch has been operated as a ranch for decades and currently supports approximately 250 head of cattle. The conservation easement ensures the land will remain a working ranch while permanently preventing future development.
The property was identified for acquisition as a key part of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan, where protecting strategic lands helps restore natural water storage and improve water quality flowing south through the Everglades system .
“Conservation easements through Florida Forever keep working lands in agriculture while protecting the natural functions that support our environment,” said DEP Secretary Alexis A. Lambert. “At Bar-B Ranch, protecting a working ranch also protects critical water flows, wetland functions and wildlife corridors, showing how agricultural lands and Everglades restoration can support each other.”
Bar-B Ranch helps store and filter water before it reaches downstream ecosystems, including the St. Lucie River Estuary, the Indian River Lagoon, Lake Okeechobee and ultimately the Greater Everglades. Protecting this land ensures its natural ability to store and cleanse water remains intact while preventing development that could threaten these vital ecological functions.
The property also lies within the Florida Wildlife Corridor, helping maintain important habitat connectivity across the region.
This acquisition was approved by Governor Ron DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet during a previous Cabinet meeting.
Florida is at the forefront of the nation’s land protection efforts and continues to serve as a model for other conservation programs across the country. Through the Florida Forever Program, the state conserves land that provides environmental, recreational and preservation benefits, including water quality and quantity safeguards; resilience from storm impacts; habitat and species protections; national security and outdoor recreation opportunities.
Since 2019, the state has committed more than $1.5 billion to the Florida Forever Program. This funding has enabled DEP to acquire over 500,000 acres for conservation, 55% of which are conservation easements.
For more information about the Florida Forever Program, visit FloridaForever.org.
| | ## About the Florida Department of Environmental Protection
The Florida Department of Environmental Protection is the state’s principal environmental agency, created to protect, conserve and manage Florida’s environment and natural resources. The department enforces federal and state environmental laws, protects Florida’s air and water quality, cleans up pollution, regulates solid waste management, promotes pollution prevention and acquires environmentally sensitive lands for preservation. The agency also maintains a statewide system of parks, trails and aquatic preserves. Visit the department’s website at FloridaDEP.gov.
https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/FLDEP/bulletins/410a6e3 |
| | | | | |
| ## FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 30, 2026
CONTACT: DEP Press Office, 850-245-2112, DEPNews@FloridaDEP.gov
Florida Forever Secures Bar-B Ranch Conservation Easement Safeguarding Working Lands While Advancing Everglades Restoration
| |
Bar-B Ranch Florida Forever Project | Lauren Yoho/Wildpath
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has secured a 1,668-acre conservation easement over Bar-B Ranch in Martin County through the Florida Forever Program, protecting a working cattle ranch that improves water quality and supports Everglades restoration while remaining in agricultural production.
Located near the C-44 Stormwater Treatment Area and Allapattah Flats Wildlife Management Area, Bar-B Ranch has been operated as a ranch for decades and currently supports approximately 250 head of cattle. The conservation easement ensures the land will remain a working ranch while permanently preventing future development.
The property was identified for acquisition as a key part of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan, where protecting strategic lands helps restore natural water storage and improve water quality flowing south through the Everglades system .
“Conservation easements through Florida Forever keep working lands in agriculture while protecting the natural functions that support our environment,” said DEP Secretary Alexis A. Lambert. “At Bar-B Ranch, protecting a working ranch also protects critical water flows, wetland functions and wildlife corridors, showing how agricultural lands and Everglades restoration can support each other.”
Bar-B Ranch helps store and filter water before it reaches downstream ecosystems, including the St. Lucie River Estuary, the Indian River Lagoon, Lake Okeechobee and ultimately the Greater Everglades. Protecting this land ensures its natural ability to store and cleanse water remains intact while preventing development that could threaten these vital ecological functions.
The property also lies within the Florida Wildlife Corridor, helping maintain important habitat connectivity across the region.
This acquisition was approved by Governor Ron DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet during a previous Cabinet meeting.
Florida is at the forefront of the nation’s land protection efforts and continues to serve as a model for other conservation programs across the country. Through the Florida Forever Program, the state conserves land that provides environmental, recreational and preservation benefits, including water quality and quantity safeguards; resilience from storm impacts; habitat and species protections; national security and outdoor recreation opportunities.
Since 2019, the state has committed more than $1.5 billion to the Florida Forever Program. This funding has enabled DEP to acquire over 500,000 acres for conservation, 55% of which are conservation easements.
For more information about the Florida Forever Program, visit FloridaForever.org.
| | | | |
| | | | | |
| ## About the Florida Department of Environmental Protection
The Florida Department of Environmental Protection is the state’s principal environmental agency, created to protect, conserve and manage Florida’s environment and natural resources. The department enforces federal and state environmental laws, protects Florida’s air and water quality, cleans up pollution, regulates solid waste management, promotes pollution prevention and acquires environmentally sensitive lands for preservation. The agency also maintains a statewide system of parks, trails and aquatic preserves. Visit the department’s website at FloridaDEP.gov.
https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/FLDEP/bulletins/410a6e3 | | | | |
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