Gainesville animal rights activist Holly Jensen and the Fund for Animals sue the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) over the captive breeding plan. They argue that no provisions have been for reintroducing captive-breed cats in south Florida and that the impacts of removing adult panthers on current panther social structure have not been addressed. A settlement is reached. FWS agrees that only kittens will be removed and that a habitat protection plan will be prepared.
Florida panther license plates go on sale.
Six Kittens removed from the wild for captive breeding program.
Below: Melody Roelke and kitten taken for captive breeding program
Population viability analysis study of the Florida panther concludes that under current demographic and genetic conditions the Florida panther will likely be extinct in 24-63 years without management intervention (Seal et al., 1992).
Four more kittens removed from the wild for the captive breeding program.
Second north Florida reintroduction study; concluded that reestablishment was biologically feasible, but that complex social issues needed to be addressed. Conversion of Alligator Alley to Interstate 75 begun, with wildlife underpasses included in the highway design. 
Habitat Preservation Plan identifies occupied and potential panther habitat, threats to habitat, and options to maintain sufficient habitat for a self-sustaining population (a minimum of 50 adults) of panthers in south Florida. 
Florida panther license plates are designed by Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission artist Peggy Perkerson. As of 8/1/97, 275,636 panther tags were sold.
| Listen to the interview with Dennis Jordan with Florida Public Radio via WFSU concerning panther recovery. |
In late December, while radiotracking an adult female in a palmetto thicket, veterinarian Sharon Taylor and biologists from the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission were surprised when she didn't move. They then found she had 2 kittens (1 male and 1 female) less than a week old. The picture below is the only known photo from south Florida of a mother and her kittens in the wild.
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South Florida Water Management District purchases 21,000 acres of Okaloacoochee Slough in Hendry County. ![]()
Beginning of a sociological study of issues relating to reintroduction.
Transfer of land for addition to Big Cypress National preserve completed.
Weekend of May 7-8, the second panther, another young male crosses the Caloosahatchee River.