Wetlands and Nature
Wetlands are among the most productive ecosystems in the
world, comparable to rain forests and coral reefs.
An immense variety of species of microbes, plants, insects, amphibians,
reptiles, birds, fish, and mammals can be part of a wetland ecosystem.
Physical and chemical features such as climate, landscape shape
(topology), geology, and the movement and abundance of water help to
determine the plants and animals that inhabit each wetland. The complex,
dynamic relationships among the organisms inhabiting the wetland
environment are referred to as food webs. (see illustration).This is why wetlands
in Texas, North Carolina, and Alaska differ from one another.
Wetlands can be thought of as "biological supermarkets." They provide
great volumes of food that attract many animal species. These animals use
wetlands for part of or all of their life-cycle. Dead plant leaves and
stems break down in the water to form small particles of organic material
called "detritus." This enriched material feeds many small aquatic insects, shellfish, and
small fish that are food for larger predatory fish, reptiles, amphibians,
birds, and mammals.
The functions of a wetland and the values of these functions to human
society depend on a complex set of relationships between the wetland and
the other ecosystems in the watershed. A watershed is a geographic area
in which water, sediments, and dissolved materials drain from higher
elevations to a common low-lying outlet or basin a point on a larger
stream, lake, underlying aquifer, or estuary.
Wetlands play an integral role in the ecology of the watershed. The combination of shallow water, high levels of nutrients, and primary productivity is ideal for the development of organisms that form the base of the food web and feed many species of fish, amphibians, shellfish, and insects. Many species of birds and mammals rely on wetlands for food, water, and shelter, especially during migration and breeding.
Wetlands' microbes, plants, and wildlife are part of global cycles for water, nitrogen, and sulfur. Furthermore, scientists are beginning to realize that atmospheric maintenance may be an additional wetlands function. Wetlands store carbon within their plant communities and soil instead of releasing it to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. Thus wetlands help to moderate global climate conditions.
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