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Published byTiffany Willis Modified over 9 years ago
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Wetlands Photo by R. Grippo
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Introduction Currently very hot area in resource management Called by many names swamps, bogs, fens, marshes, vernal ponds, pocosins (NC) Important in ecological restoration because >50% of natural wetlands have been destroyed
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Ecosystem Services of Wetlands 1. Sponge effect - decrease flood peak and increase flow during drought
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Flooding in the mid-South, Nov., 2001
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Farmland flooding
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Ecosystem Services of Wetlands 1. Sponge effect - decrease flood peak and increase flow during drought 2. Groundwater cleansing – wetlands metabolize water increase water quality (biological filters)
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Ecosystem Services of Wetlands 1. Sponge effect - decrease flood peak and increase flow during drought 2. Groundwater cleansing – wetlands metabolize water increase water quality (biological filters) 3. Decreased shoreline erosion – plants stabilize banks
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Lacustrine wetlands in Pine Barrens, southern NJ Photo by R. Grippo
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Coastal mangrove swamp, Belize, Central America Photo of R. Grippo and Penn State student
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Ecosystem Services of Wetlands 1. Sponge effect - decrease flood peak and increase flow during drought 2. Groundwater cleansing – wetlands metabolize water increase water quality (biological filters) 3. Decreased shoreline erosion – plants stabilize banks 4. High in primary productivity (2 nd only to tropical rainforest) = reduce greenhouse effect
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History of Wetland Destruction TTTTowns usually built on stream corridors TTTTradition drain swamps (malaria, etc) AAAAgriculture 87% of losses to increase tillable land UUUUnequal distribution of losses Coasts Northern tier Southern coastal plain Major river basins
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Towns usually built on stream corridors Tradition drain swamps (malaria, etc) Agriculture 87% of losses to increase tillable land Unequal distribution of losses Coasts Coasts Northern tier Northern tier Southern coastal plain Southern coastal plain Major river basins Major river basins 1955 1975 loss of of 550,000 acres of wetlands/year CWA passed to prevent further loss still lost 92,500 acres/yr up to 1985 reauthorize CWA, tighten laws much more still a big problem (saw on last weeks field trip) State with most wetlands = Alaska (only lost 1% so far) Note: wetlands are the 1º target of restoration efforts because 50-90% of historical wetlands are gone
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Regulation 1. Section 404 of Clean Water Act - “No dredged or fill material can be placed into any waterway of the US (including wetlands) Note: does not prevent draining, clearing or polluting wetlands (but hard to get permission to do)
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Section 404 (con’t) Gives implicit authority to EPA, and Army Corps of Engineers to manage wetlands Note: COE not allowed to delineate, only verify Section 404 permits - need before dredge/fill Note: these are rarely denied, process just made so difficult that permit is usually withdrawn US FWS and NRCS (National Resource Conservation Service) place classification on soil that determines whether there is a wetlands or not.
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Wetland Conservation provision of the Food Security Act of 1985 (Swampbuster) designed to discourage the conversion of wetlands into non-wetland areas Previously, farmers allowed to use converted (filled) wetlands as part of acreage for determining subsidy (USDA encouraged loss of wetlands!) Swampbuster - USDA now withholds certain subsidies if convert wetland
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Wetlands converted into agricultural land
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Definition of Wetlands Palustrine - swamp-like, no deep open water Lacustrine - associated with deep water lake, pond Riverine - associated with stream, river
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Lacustrine wetlands
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Riverine wetlands near State College, PA Photo by R. Grippo
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Palustrine wetlands, Merchants Millpond, NC Photo by R. Grippo
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Florida Everglades Photo by R. Grippo
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Everglades along coast of Florida Bay Photo by R. Grippo
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