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In this Friday, Feb. 10, 2017 photo, tree limbs knocked over by Hurricane Matthew in 2016 litter the shoreline as a boat passes by an inlet in the Indian River Lagoon, Fla. America’s most biologically diverse waterway is seriously ill. Despite hundreds of millions of tax dollars spent to reduce pollution in Florida’s 153-mile-long Indian River Lagoon, an Associated Press analysis of water quality data from 2000-2015 found stark increases in pollutants that cause harmful algal blooms.  (AP Photo/John Raoux)

In this Friday, Feb. 10, 2017 photo, tree limbs knocked over by Hurricane Matthew in 2016 litter the shoreline as a boat passes by an inlet in the Indian River Lagoon, Fla. America’s most biologically diverse waterway is seriously ill. Despite hundreds of millions of tax dollars spent to reduce pollution in Florida’s 153-mile-long Indian River Lagoon, an Associated Press analysis of water quality data from 2000-2015 found stark increases in pollutants that cause harmful algal blooms. (AP Photo/John Raoux)

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