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Connecticut Water Trails Association |
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Connecticut Water Trails Program
Wetlands
Wetlands and People
Only recently have we begun to understand the
importance of the functions that wetlands perform. Far from being
useless, disease- ridden places, wetlands provide values that no other
ecosystem can, including natural water quality improvement, flood
protection, shoreline erosion control, opportunities for recreation and
aesthetic appreciation, and natural products for our use at no cost.
Wetlands can provide one or more of these functions. Protecting wetlands
in turn can protect our safety and welfare.
In addition to improving water quality through
filtering, some wetlands maintain stream flow during dry periods, and
many replenish groundwater. Many Americans depend on groundwater for
drinking.
Flood Protection
Wetlands function as natural sponges that trap and
slowly release surface water, rain, snowmelt, groundwater and flood
waters. Trees, root mats, and other wetland vegetation also slow the
speed of flood waters and distribute them more slowly over the
floodplain. This combined water storage and braking action lowers flood
heights and reduces erosion. Wetlands within and downstream of urban
areas are particularly valuable, counteracting the greatly increased
rate and volume of surface- water runoff from pavement and buildings.
The ability of wetlands to control erosion is so
valuable that some states are restoring wetlands in coastal areas to
buffer the storm surges from hurricanes and tropical storms. Wetlands at
the margins of lakes, rivers, bays, and the ocean protect shorelines and
stream banks against erosion. Wetland plants hold the soil in place with
their roots, absorb the energy of waves, and break up the flow of stream
or river currents.
Fish and Wildlife Habitat
For many animals and plants, like wood ducks,
muskrat, cattails, and swamp rose, inland wetlands are the only places
they can live. Beaver may actually create their own wetlands. For
others, such as striped bass, peregrine falcon, otter, black bear,
raccoon, and deer, wetlands provide important food, water, or shelter.
Many of the U.S. breeding bird populations-- including ducks, geese,
woodpeckers, hawks, wading birds, and many song-birds-- feed, nest, and
raise their young in wetlands. Migratory waterfowl use coastal and
inland wetlands as resting, feeding, breeding, or nesting grounds for at
least part of the year. Indeed, an international agreement to protect
wetlands of international importance was developed because some species
of migratory birds are completely dependent on certain wetlands and
would become extinct if those wetlands were destroyed.
We use a wealth of natural products from wetlands,
including fish and shellfish, blueberries, cranberries, timber, and wild
rice, as well as medicines that are derived from wetland soils and
plants. Many of the nation's fishing and shell fishing industries
harvest wetland- dependent species; the catch is valued at $15 billion a
year. In the Southeast, for example, nearly all the commercial catch and
over half of the recreational harvest are fish and shellfish that depend
on the estuary- coastal wetland system. Louisiana's coastal marshes
produce an annual commercial fish and shellfish harvest that amounted to
1.2 billion pounds worth $244 million in 1991. Wetlands are habitats for
fur-bearers like muskrat, beaver, and mink as well as reptiles such as
alligators. The nation's harvest of muskrat pelts alone is worth over
$70 million annually.
Wetlands have recreational, historical, scientific,
and cultural values. More than half of all U.S. adults (98 million)
hunt, fish, bird watch or photograph wildlife. They spend a total of
$59.5 billion annually. Painters and writers continue to capture the
beauty of wetlands on canvas and paper, or through cameras, and video
and sound recorders. Others appreciate these wonderlands through hiking,
boating, and other recreational activities. Almost everyone likes being
on or near the water; part of the enjoyment is the varied, fascinating
life forms.
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