In 1998, an amendment to the
Florida Constitution approved the establishment of the FWC with a headquarters in Tallahassee, the
state capital, on July 1, 1999. It resulted from a merger between three former offices, namely the Marine Fisheries Commission, Division of Marine Resources, the former Florida Marine Patrol, and the Division of Law Enforcement of the
Florida Department of Environmental Protection, and all of the employees and commissioners of the former Florida Game and Freshwater Fish Commission. The Florida Department of Environmental Protection since then serves as the environmental regulatory agency for the state, enforcing environmental legislation regarding air and water quality, for example. In 2004, the Florida Legislature approved to integrate parts of the Division of Wildlife, Division of Freshwater Fisheries, and the Florida Marine Research Institute to create the Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWRI) in
St. Petersburg, Florida. It has over 600 employees. , the FWC had over 2,000 full-time employees, and maintained the FWRI, five regional offices, and 73 field offices across the state. ==Organizational units==