WETLAN DS. Wetlands are lands where saturation with water is the dominant factor determining the nature of soil development and the types of plant and.

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Presentation transcript:

WETLAN DS

Wetlands are lands where saturation with water is the dominant factor determining the nature of soil development and the types of plant and animal communities living in the soil and on its surface. vary widely because of differences in soils, topography, climate, water chemistry, vegetation, and other factors found from the tundra to the tropics and on every continent except Antarctica.

Main goal is to control water systems Acts like a sponge and hold in water when excess and releases when needed Purifies the water control erosion recycles nutrients which is critical to functioning of earth acts as a migration stop reproduction ground for animals of other habitats

Slow moving streams, rivers, or isolated depressions that host trees and some shrubs Around the perimeters of rivers and streams Main water source from the excess water Flooded or extremely saturated soil Excellent living conditions for a variety of living things

wildlife Freshwater Shrimp Crayfish Clams Wood Ducks River Otters Cottonmouth Snakes Insects American Crocodile Vegetation Red Maple Oak Cypress Willows Western Hemlock

An inland area flooded with 1–6 feet of water, containing a variety of grasses, flowers, and bushes Water supply from surface water and groundwater Excellent soil condition

Wildlife Herons Egrets Moorhens Duck and Geese Muskrats Minks Otters Raccoons Opossums snakes salamanders Vegetation Cattails Saw grass Water Lily Pickerel Weed Spike Rush Bulrush

Spongy peat deposits, acidic waters, and a floor covered by a thick carpet of moss Cooler temperatures and high amounts of precipitation and humidity Main source of water from precipitation High amount of acid producing unique plants

wildlife Moose Deer Lynx Sand Hill Crane Sora Rail Salamanders great gray owl Vegetation Cotton grass Cranberry Blueberry Pine Carnivorous Sundew Labrador Tea Tamarack

A Peat-forming area that receives nutrients from sources other than precipitation Less acidic Covered by grasses, sedges, rushes, and wildflowers Cooler areas with high amounts of precipitation and humidity Water source upslope sources, surrounding soils, and groundwater movement

wildlife Metalmark Spotted Turtle Leafhopper Angular Spittlebug Tamarack tree cricket Blazing Star Borer Red-legged Spittlebug Box turtle vegetation Showy Lady’s-Slipper Hardstem bulrush Three-square Lake sedge Water sedge, cattail Common arrowhead

Freshwater Marsh. (2008). Retrieved October 2, 2008, from Enchanted Learning: com/biomes/marsh/freshwaterprintout.shtml Prairie Fen. (2008, March 3). Retrieved October 2, 2008,from Michigan State University Extension: cfm?id=10667 Wetland Types. (2006, February 26). Retrieved October 1, 2008, from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency: Wetlands. (2002). Retrieved October 1, 2008, from MBGNet: