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Wetlands

By GreenWorks Assistant Producer, Dave Beste

etlands are not all soggy, gushy, and mosquito infested. They are not all useless pieces of real estate just begging to become a parking lot, highway, or a department store. Wetlands are actually unique, diminishing, and very local.

here are two types of wetlands: coastal and inland. They are generally described as marshes, bogs, or swamps. Each type may have varying characteristics depending upon the region. Some wetlands may, in fact, seem quite far from even being "wet". These are actually seasonal wetlands that follow a delicate cycle in order to maintain the native plants and wildlife that call it home. An overwhelming majority of wetlands in the continental United States are fresh water. In fact, there are slightly more than twenty times more freshwater wetlands than saltwater wetlands.

he function of wetlands is multi-layered. Because of its amazing ability to hold large amounts of water, the soil is able to support plant and animal life that could exist under no other circumstances. Not only does a wetland possess unique inhabitants, but it is also instrumental in protecting nearby human inhabitants. Wetlands, such as those that cradle the coast of Louisiana, are wonderful barriers. During huge storms, such as hurricanes, the heavily saturated wetland soils greatly reduce the size of the waves hitting the coast. Without wetlands acting as a buffer, there is serious threat of heavy damage being done to the mainland.

e are losing our wetlands. The wetland total in the continental United States during the Colonial Era approached 220 million acres. Since that time the total acreage of wetlands in the present day is less than half that, at 105.5 million acres. The major cause of this loss, unfortunately, is due to progress and urbanization. What we would normally accept as a common convenience, such as a paved highway or interstate that crosses a wetland instead of going around it, can drastically change the environment. An impervious surface, a road or a parking lot for example, prevents water from entering the soil. And as water runs off of the impervious surface it takes with it debris, pesticides, fertilizers, road salts and other foreign agents into the wetlands and eventually will bring about an unnatural change to these sensitive environments. Pollutants exist not only in the water, but also in the air falling onto plants, often suffocating them.

astewater, such as storm water and sewer water is also filtered into wetlands. These polluted waters have a destabilizing affect on the fragile eco-system. Once introduced, these pollutants can produce harmful algal blooms or raise the water temperature within the wetland. Both of these results can have deadly consequences for wetland inhabitants because both deplete oxygen levels in the water, robbing fish and other wildlife of their life-sustaining nutrients.

he original loss of wetlands was blamed mainly on agriculture. And although farmers are no longer permitted to convert wetlands into agriculture or farmlands, a large part of the damage has already been done. Years of irrigation, pesticide and fertilizer use, animal waste and grazing, and the building of dams and levees has greatly changed the water quality and ability to sustain life of many wetlands.

et another threat to this precious resource has been our need to control our waterways. Levees have been built to divert waterways and control their direction, keeping water from ever getting to a quickly drying up wetland. For instance, in the 1960's the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers constructed canals throughout Louisiana to make it easier and quicker for ships to transport goods up the Mississippi River. The results have been disastrous, as the banks of the canals have helped only to erode wetlands at a furious pace. Today, Louisiana loses the equivalent of one football field of wetland habitat each day. Similarly, California and Iowa have lost nearly ninety-nine percent of their original wetlands. And twenty-two states have lost at least fifty percent of the original wetlands.

he contributions of levees, canals, and urbanization in Louisiana alone have all aided in the loss of “between 25 and 30 square miles of marsh and swamp a year, 80 percent of total annual wetlands loss nationwide." It has been, in a large part, a direct result of human interference that has caused the depletion of these important wetlands. A growing population has placed an impossible demand on the soil that it lives on.

he problem that has been created has been recognized. Plans to stop wetland erosion andloss have begun and progress has been made. But the fact still remains that as a nation we are losing our wetlands at an alarming rate.

t is human meddling and manipulation that has created this enormous problem. But hopefully it will be human intervention that will help to create a wetland resurgence. The levees that have denied floodwaters from reaching thirsty wetlands for years are now having holes strategically placed in them to direct the water towards the needed area. In man-made canals tiny islands are beginning to surface and change is being made.


s usual, change has come only when society begins to pay the price for it's lack of foresight. The neglect of wetlands has now forced communities in many places to consider how they can rectify the problem and maintain their homes. The answer is not easy, but it is imaginable. By caring and preserving our wetlands the answers will eventually unfold.


References and Links:

EPA Office of Water

National Wetlands Research Center

Information on Wetlands

Coastal Louisiana

California Wetlands

Pennsylvania Wetlands

National Wildlife Federation- Wetlands

America's Vanishing Treasure Video
produced by Barataria Terrebonne National Estuary Program

National Wildlife Magazine: Swamping Louisiana
Laura Tangley; April/ May 2002

See past topics of National Watersheds here!




Contact Producer of Watersheds.tv,
Kelly Meinhart.

 

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