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A wetland is a place in which the land is covered by water—salt, fresh, or somewhere in between—either seasonally or permanently. It functions as its own distinct ecosystem. You can recognize wetlands from other types of land or bodies of water primarily by the vegetation that has adapted to wet soil. © Roger Leguen / WWF-Canon.
Here are 15 amazing facts about wetlands. Wetlands are the world’s biome that is in charge of replenishing the groundwater aquifers by filtering, cleaning, and storing water, and providing a home to thousands of animal and plant species including wildlife.
13 lut 2024 · Want to know facts about wetlands? Wetlands are one of the most naturally diverse biomes in the world. Unfortunately, statistics say that the natural wetland is also one of the most threatened environments (and is in need of dire protection). Wetlands are very important to a sustainable Earth.
24 lut 2023 · What are wetlands? These diverse ecosystems are found on every continent except for Antarctica. Generally, they’re divided into two categories: coastal or inland. Coastal wetlands are a mix of...
23 paź 2024 · wetland, complex ecosystem characterized by flooding or saturation of the soil, which creates low-oxygen environments that favour a specialized assemblage of plants, animals, and microbes, which exhibit adaptations designed to tolerate periods of sluggishly moving or standing water.
A wetland is a distinct semi-aquatic ecosystem whose groundcovers are flooded or saturated in water, either permanently, for years or decades, or only seasonally. Flooding results in oxygen-poor processes taking place, especially in the soils. [1]
19 paź 2023 · A wetland is an area of land that is either covered by water or saturated with water. The water is often groundwater, seeping up from an aquifer or spring. A wetland’s water can also come from a nearby river or lake. Seawater can also create wetlands, especially in coastal areas that experience strong tides.