|
WHY CARE ABOUT WETLANDS? A wetland provides important services to our environment; and when it disappears, so do those services. We lose vital flood protection, water cleansing, and food. All of the animals and plants that live in that habitat for all or part of their lives often have nowhere else to go. Frogs have no place to mate and lay eggs; pintail ducks lose a watering and feeding stop on their long migrations; aquatic insects die and all the animals that eat them must find food elsewhere. Wetlands
and the Environment The dense vegetation of wetlands create a natural water treatment system that surpasses anything that humans have created. As water enters a wetland, it slows. Sediment settles out and is trapped by the wetland plants and their roots. The plants also absorb almost two-thirds of the nitrate and phosphorous commonly carried in stormwater runoff and floods, especially from water that has come from agricultural areas and their heavy loads of fertilizer. Bacteria in the water and soil also can neutralize wastes, including the body wastes of animals and humans. The slowed, cleansed water of a wetland may pass into another waterway, but much of it percolates into the ground and recharges groundwater supplies. Such supplies provide a majority of the drinking water for many regions of the United States. For example, one wetland in Massachusetts was found to recharge a shallow aquifer with more than 240 million gallons per month. In addition to slowing and cleansing water, the wetland's dense vegetation creates a tough buffer zone that can deflect waves and other heavy water surges that might otherwise erode shorelines and threaten human habitations. Wetlands
and Our Economy One healthy saltwater marsh, for example, cleans water, recharges groundwater, nurses millions of fish and shellfish that are then caught by thousands of commercial and recreational anglers, and consumed by millions of people, and provides habitat for hundreds of birds, reptiles, and amphibians that people spend millions of dollars each year to see, photograph, and sometimes hunt. WETLANDS
FOR PLEASURE Now that you've glimpsed the reasons why wetlands are so important, check out wetlands near you - the inland wetlands. |
|
|
Back
to: Forest, Desert and Wetlands
FACTS
|