Loxahatchee NWR is one of over 500
national wildlife refuges located throughout the United States and administered by the
United States Fish and Wildlife Service. The refuge not only preserves and protects native wildlife, but also offers compatible public recreational and educational opportunities including walking trails, a canoe trail, bike trail, boat ramps, fishing platform, observation towers, butterfly garden, and a visitor center. It is home to
American alligator, the endangered
snail kite,
coastal plain cooter and
Florida softshell turtles, and as many as 257
species of
birds. As such, it has been designated a 'gateway site' for the
Great Florida Birding Trail. Not quite all of the refuge is
Everglades marsh habitat. A
bald cypress swamp is the largest remaining remnant of a cypress strand that once separated the pine
flatwoods in the east from the Everglades marshes. A boardwalk into the swamp gives the visitor a chance for an up-close swamp experience without getting their feet wet.
Hurricane Wilma damaged the refuge in October 2005, and the administration building was condemned. The Lee Road fishing pier was damaged by
Hurricane Irma and will remain closed until further notice. Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge-sign.jpg|Sign at Hillsboro Area trailhead Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge-Visitor Center.jpg|Visitor Center at Boynton Beach Heliconius charitonius-dorsal.jpg|
Zebra Longwing at the butterfly garden Eudocimus albus-standing.jpg|
American white ibis by the boardwalk ;Conservation Despite all of its treasures, the refuge is in serious danger of quickly becoming an exclusive haven for invasive plants, especially the broad-leaved paper bark (
Melaleuca quinquenervia) and Old World climbing fern (
Lygodium microphyllum), both rapidly growing non-native species, which are quickly overgrowing the native flora and are likely not compatible with the native wildlife. == Park Activities ==