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What are Wetlands?

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Title: What are Wetlands?


1
Saving Wetlands
Is saving Lives
2
prepared by ECOSCI
  • The Science and Ecology Club
  • The Academy of Mount St. Ursula
  • Bronx, NY, USA

3
What are Wetlands?
  • areas between water and land

4
What are Wetlands?
  • contain hydric soil - saturated by water.
  • soil lacks oxygen when saturated
  • land that is seasonally wet.
  • habitat for many aquatic and terrestrial species.
  • Some found only in wetlands.
  • Wetland plants known as hydrophytes.

5
Formation of Wetlands
  • Driven by location.
  • Sediment deposited along river.
  • Sediment deposited at the mouth of the river.
  • Sediment fills in aging lakes.
  • Artificial wetlands from oil sands.
  • Effort to reclaim wetlands destroyed by mining
    for oil.

6
Types of Wetlands
There are Three Major Types of Wetlands
  • Marshes
  • Bogs
  • Swamps

7
Types of Wetlands
There are Four Major Types of Wetlands
  • Marshes
  • Bogs
  • Swamps
  • Open Water

8
Palustrine (no waves) and Estuarine
(tides/waves) Wetlands on Nonfederal Lands and
Water Areas in 2002, in Millions of Acres, with
Margins of Error
  • Wetlands Type Acres
  • Total Estuarine Wetlands(tides/waves)5.8 0.4
  • Palustrine Forested (swamp) 62.2 1.3
  • Palustrine Scrub-shrub (swamp) 6.4 0.5
  • Palustrine Emergent (marsh) 26.0 0.8
  • Palustrine Non-vegetated (pond) 10.2 0.6

Total Palustrine Wetlands 104.8 1.4 Total
Palustrine and Estuarine Wetlands 110.6 1.4
9
Marshes
  • areas where the soil is periodically or
    permanently flooded with water.
  • dominated by soft stemmed grasses
  • have shallow water.

fiddlercrabs
10
Marshes
  • Marsh plants
  • - cattails
  • - rushes
  • - bur weed
  • - water lilies

Marsh animals can be very diverse. - Green
heron
11
Bogs
  • Associated with evergreens
  • Usually found in areas with short growing seasons
    and lower temperatures.
  • pH less than 5

12
Bogs
  • Little or no drainage
  • Acidified by rotting vegetation,
  • Some open water surrounded by a floating mat of
    sedges, sphagnum mosses, and other acid-loving
    species.
  • A quagmire, which trembles or gives way
    underfoot.

13
Swamps
  • dominated by trees and shrubs (woody plants)
  • often occur along river floodplains, subtropical
    to tropical coasts and in quiet lakes.
  • inhabited by an abundant variety of animals

14
Types of wetlands in the US
  • Coastal/Tidal wetlands
  • salt water and fresh water mix due to tidal
    action.
  • Found around the Gulf, Atlantic, Pacific and
    Alaskan coasts.
  • Regional example is Jamaica Bay.

15
Types of wetlands in the US
  • Inland wetlands
  • Include marshes, swamps, and wet meadows.
  • Great Swamp in New Jersey.

16
  • Improves water quality.
  • Reduces flood and storm damage.
  • Regulates water levels in watersheds.
  • Provides wildlife habitats

Functions of Wetlands
17
Functions of Wetlands (cont)
  • Wetlands protect terrestrial areas adjoining them
    from storms, floods and tidal damage.
  • Plants in wetlands help to filter pollutants in
    the water.
  • Wetlands provide an excellent example of
    invasion, modification and succession.

18
WHAT DO WETLANDS PROVIDE?
  • support more wildlife and plants than any other
    kind of habitat.
  • Provide nesting and feeding grounds for both
    resident and migratory birds, including game
    bird, waterfowl, and songbirds.

19
Wetlands Supply
  • habitat for 212 animals in Western Washington
  • 285 species in the eastern region of the state.
  • can produce up to 1,300 pounds of fish per acre.


20
Biodiversity of Wetlands (Nattha)
  • Wetland serves as a home for many plants and
    animals, ranging from invertebrates, fishes,
    birds, to the endangered species such as Great
    Hornbill and wandering shrew.

Arrowheads
N. American River Otter
Shrew
Pickerel Weed
Great Blue Heron
Great Hornbill
21
  • It provides animals a variety of food as well as
    shelter to hide from their predators.

Cricket Frog
Many plants and animals have adjusted themselves
into the wet environment.
Yellow Rat Snake
Mangrove
catfish
Crayfish
Bluegill
mudskipper
22
Plants
cattail
  • There are three types of plants in wetlands the
    emergents, the submergents, and the floating
    plants

Purple loosestrife
pondweed
arrowhead
coontail
bloodroot
Skunk cabbage
duckweed
Yellow lotus
23
What happens to the wetlands?
  • Some wetlands continue to exist but are degraded
    by the effects of fertilizers, pesticides, and
    oil runoff.

24
Destruction of wetlands
  • Intrusion of nonnative species
  • Draining wetlands for agricultural purposes and
    mosquito control
  • Dikes and dams to form ponds and lakes
  • Pollution from landfills
  • Removal of vegetation
  • Air pollution

25
The Disappearing Wetlands
  • loss of 70,000 - 90,000 acres per year in the
    U.S. (EPA)
  • More than half have turned into land.
  • Acres lost to new houses, businesses and farms.

26
In 200 years
  • 11
  • 5

27
1982 Report to Congress, re 1950s to 1970s 9.2
million acres lost average annual loss of
458,000 acres 87 percent to agriculture. 1991
Report to Congress, re 1970s to 1980s 2.6
million acres lost average annual loss of
290,000 acres agriculture largest single reason
Recent report Rate of wetland loss continues
to decline.
  • Fish Wildlife Service
  • National Wetlands Inventory (NWI)

28
How it Affects the U.S
  • Wetland lost ---gt increased salt levels
  • The high amount of salt kills vegetation and
    trees.

29
How do Wetlands help?
  • a key link in watershed management.
  • protects water quality
  • controls flooding
  • serves as home for many plants and animals.
  • economy has a significant connection to wetlands.

30
Efforts to Conserve Wetlands
  • The Nature Conservancy Proposes
  • Rehabilitation
  • Construction of new wetlands
  • The U.S Army Corps of Engineers
  • issue permits to control activities in wetlands.
  • minimize damage to wetlands.

31
Government Action to Preserve Wetlands
  • The No-Net-Loss Plan (Dec. 2002)- for every
    acre of wetland lost, it would be replaced with
    an acre of artificial wetland.

32
Government Action Effectiveness
  • Section 404 of the Clean Water Act was enacted to
    control wetland development
  • This law is not effective and has many loopholes.
  • Few states have wetland programs
  • No true national program to protect wetlands

33
Restoration Needed
  • Wetlands are in poor conditions
  • Man-made wetlands lack a rich biodiversity
  • Need to restore to its natural state
  • Restoration is a very long and complex process.

34
Bibliography
  • Know Your Watershed http//www.ctic.purdue.edu/KYW
    /Brochures/Wetlands.html
  • In Canada's Wilderness, Measuring the Cost of Oil
    Profits http//www.climateark.org/articles/reader.
    asp?linkid47064
  • Wetlands Losses in the United States 1780's to
    1980's http//www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/othrdata
    /wetloss/wetloss.htm
  • Wetland Loss Index 1780s-1990s http//www.epa.gov/
    iwi/1999sept/iv7_usmap.html
  • Wetland Losses in the United States Scope,
    Causes, Impacts, and Future Prospectshttp//www.u
    sgcrp.gov/usgcrp/seminars/9777DD.html

35
Saving Wetlands
Saving Lives
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