Coasts:
areas between land and open sea that are not influenced by rivers (e.g.
shorelines, beaches, mangroves and coral reefs)
Estuaries: where rivers meet the sea and water changes from fresh to
salt as it meets the sea (e.g. deltas, mudflats and salt marches)
Floodplains: areas next to the permanent course of a river that
extends to the edge of the valley (e.g. ox-bow lakes and river-islands)
Marshes/swamps: areas where water is more or less permanently at the
surface and/or causing saturation of the soil (e.g. papyrus swamp, fen,
peatlands)
Shallow lakes: areas of permanent or semi-permanent water with
little flow (e.g. ponds, salt lakes, volcanic crater lakes).
All wetlands have two characteristics in common: Water or ice and earth.
EPA Graphic
Although wetlands are often wet, a wetland might not be wet year-round. In
fact, some of the most important wetlands are only seasonally wet. Wetlands are
the link between the land and the water. They are transition zones where the
flow of water, the cycling of nutrients, and the energy of the sun meet to
produce a unique ecosystem characterized by hydrology, soils,and vegetation—making
these areas very important features of a watershed. Using a watershed-based
approach to wetland protection ensures that the whole system, including land,
air, and water resources, is protected.
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 . Wetlands vary widely because
of regional and local differences in soils, topography, climate, hydrology,
water chemistry, vegetation, and other factors, including human disturbance.
Indeed, wetlands are found from the tundra to the tropics and on every continent
except Antarctica.
Marshes
EPA
Graphic
Marshes are defined as wetlands frequently or continually inundated with
water, characterized by emergent soft-stemmed vegetation adapted to saturated
soil conditions. There are many different kinds of marshes, ranging from the
prairie potholes to the Everglades, coastal to inland, freshwater to saltwater.
All types receive most of their water from surface water, and many marshes are
also fed by groundwater. Nutrients are plentiful and the pH is usually neutral
leading to an abundance of plant and animal life.
Functions & Values
Marshes recharge groundwater supplies and moderate streamflow by providing
water to streams. This is an especially important function during periods of
drought. The presence of marshes in a watershed helps to reduce damage caused by
floods by slowing and storing flood water. As water moves slowly through a
marsh, sediment and other pollutants settle to the substrate, or floor of the
marsh. Marsh vegetation and microorganisms also use excess nutrients for growth
that can otherwise pollute surface water such as nitrogen and phosphorus from
fertilizer. This wetland type is very important to preserving the quality of
surface waters. In fact, marshes are so good at cleaning polluted waters that
people are now building replicas of this wetland type to treat wastewater from
farms, parking lots, and small sewage plants.
Non-tidal marshes
Non-tidal marshes are the most prevalent and widely distributed
wetlands in North America. They are mostly freshwater marshes, although some are
brackish or alkaline. They frequently occur along streams in poorly drained
depressions, and in the shallow water along the boundaries of lakes, ponds, and
rivers. Water levels in these wetlands generally vary from a few inches to two
or three feet, and some marshes, like prairie potholes, may periodically dry out
completely. It is easy to recognize a non-tidal marsh by its characteristic
soils, vegetation, and wildlife. Highly organic, mineral rich soils of sand,
silt, and clay underlie these wetlands, while lily pads, cattails (see photo),
reeds, and bulrushes provide excellent habitat for waterfowl and other small
mammals, such as red-winged blackbirds, great blue herons, otters, and muskrats.
prairie potholes, playa lakes, vernal pools, and wet meadows are all examples of
non-tidal marshes. Functions & Values Due to their high levels of nutrients,
freshwater marshes are one of the most productive ecosystems on earth. They can
sustain a vast array of plant communities that in turn support a wide variety of
wildlife within this vital wetland ecosystem. As a result, marshes sustain a
diversity of life that is way out of proportion with its size. In addition to
their considerable habitat value, non-tidal marshes serve to mitigate flood
damage and filter excess nutrients from surface runoff.
Status
Unfortunately, like many other wetland ecosystems, freshwater marshes
have suffered major acreage losses to human development. Some have been degraded
by excessive deposits of nutrients and sediment from construction and farming.
Severe flooding and nutrient deposition to downstream waters have often followed
marsh destruction and degradation. Such environmental problems prove the vital
roles these wetlands play. This realization has spurred enhanced protection and
restoration of marsh ecosystems, such as the prairie potholes and the
Everglades.
Tidal marshes
Tidal marshes can be found along protected coastlines in middle and high
latitudes worldwide. They are most prevalent in the United States on the eastern
coast from Maine to Florida and continuing on to Louisiana and Texas along the
Gulf of Mexico. Some are freshwater marshes, others are brackish (somewhat
salty), and still others are saline (salty), but they are all influenced by the
motion of ocean tides. Tidal marshes are normally categorized into two distinct
zones, the lower or intertidal marsh and the upper or high marsh. In saline
tidal marshes, the lower marsh is normally covered and exposed daily by the
tide. It is predominantly covered by the tall form of smooth cordgrass (Spartina
alterniflora). The saline marsh is covered by water only sporadically, and is
characterized by short smooth cordgrass, spike grass,and black grass (Juncus
gerardii). Saline marshes support a highly specialized set of life adapted for
saline conditions. Brackish and fresh tidal marshes are also associated with
specific plants and animals, but they tend to have a greater variety of plant
life than saline marshes. Functions & Values Tidal marshes serve many
important functions. They buffer stormy seas, slow shoreline erosion, and are
able to absorb excess nutrients before they reach the oceans and estuaries. High
concentrations of nutrients can cause oxygen levels low enough to harm wildlife,
such as the "Dead Zone" in the Gulf of Mexico. Tidal marshes also
provide vital food and habitat for clams, crabs, and juvenile fish, as well as
offering shelter and nesting sites for several species of migratory waterfowl.
Status
Pressure to fill in these wetlands for coastal development has lead to
significant and continuing losses of tidal marshes, especially along the
Atlantic coast. Pollution, especially near urban areas, also remains a serious
threat to these ecosystems. Fortunately, most states have enacted special laws
to protect tidal marshes, but much diligence is needed to assure that these
protective measures are actively enforced.
Swamps
A swamp is any wetland dominated by woody plants. There are many
different kinds of swamps, ranging from the forested red maple, (Acer rubrum),
swamps of the Northeast, to the extensive bottomland hardwood forests found
along the sluggish rivers of the Southeast. Swamps are characterized by
saturated soils during the growing season, and standing water during certain
times of the year. The highly organic soils of swamps form a thick, black,
nutrient-rich environment for the growth of water-tolerant trees such as cypress
(Taxodium spp.), Atlantic white cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides), and tupelo
(Nyssa aquatica). Some swamps are dominated by shrubs, such as buttonbush or
smooth alder. Plants, birds, fish, and invertebrates such as freshwater shrimp,
crayfish, and clams require the habitats provided by swamps. Many rare species,
such as the endangered American crocodile depend on these ecosystems as well.
Swamps may be divided into two major classes, depending on the type of
vegetation present: shrub swamps, and forested swamps.
Functions &Values
Swamps serve vital roles in flood protection and
nutrient removal. Floodplain forests are especially high in productivity and
species diversity because of the rich deposits of alluvial soil from floods.
Many upland creatures depend on the abundance of food found in the lowland
swamps, and valuable timber can be sustainably harvested to provide building
materials for people.
Status
Due to the nutrient-rich soils present in swamps, many of these
fertile woodlands have been drained and cleared for agriculture and other
development. Over 70 percent of the Nation's floodplain forested swamps have
been lost. Historically, swamps have been portrayed as frightening
no-man's-lands. This perception led to the vast devastation of immense tracts of
swampland over the past 200 years, such as the destruction of more than half of
the legendary Great Dismal Swamp of southeastern Virginia.
Forested swamps
Forested swamps are found throughout the United States. They are often
inundated with floodwater from nearby rivers and streams. Sometimes, they are
covered by many feet of very slowly moving or standing water. In very dry years
they may represent the only shallow water for miles and their presence is
critical to the survival of wetland-dependent species like wood ducks (Aix
sponsa), river otters (Lutra canadensis), and cottonmouth snakes (Agkistrodon
piscivorus). Some of the common species of trees found in these wetlands are red
maple and pin oak (Quercus palustris) in the Northern United States, overcup oak
(Quercus lyrata) and cypress in the South, and willows (Salix spp.) and western
hemlock (Tsuga sp.) in the Northwest. Bottomland hardwood swamp is a name
commonly given to forested swamps in the south central United States.
Shrub swamps
Shrub swamps, are similar to forested swamps, except that shrubby vegetation
such as buttonbush, willow, dogwood (Cornus sp.) , and swamp rose (Rosa
palustris) predominates. In fact, forested and shrub swamps are often found
adjacent to one another. The soil is often water logged for much of the year,
and covered at times by as much as a few feet of water because this type of
swamp is found along slow moving streams and in floodplains. Mangrove swamps are
a type of shrub swamp dominated by mangroves that covers vast expanses of
southern Florida.
Bogs
EPA
Graphic
Bogs are one of North America's most distinctive kinds of wetlands. They are
characterized by spongy peat deposits, acidic waters, and a floor covered by a
thick carpet of sphagnum moss. Bogs receive all or most of their water from
precipitation rather than from runoff, groundwater or streams. As a result, bogs
are low in the nutrients needed for plant growth, a condition that is enhanced
by acid forming peat mosses. There are two primary ways that a bog can develop:
bogs can form as sphagnum moss grows over a lake or pond and slowly fills it (terrestrialization),
or bogs can form as sphagnum moss blankets dry land and prevents water from
leaving the surface (paludification). Over time, many feet of acidic peat
deposits build up in bogs of either origin. The unique and demanding physical
and chemical characteristics of bogs result in the presence of plant and animal
communities that demonstrate many special adaptations to low nutrient levels,
waterlogged conditions, and acidic waters, such as carnivorous plants.
Functions and Values
Bogs serve an important ecological function in
preventing downstream flooding by absorbing precipitation. Bogs support some of
the most interesting plants in the United States (like the carnivorous sundew),
and provide habitat to animals threatened by human encroachment.
Status
Bogs in the United States are mostly found in the glaciated
northeast and Great Lakes regions (northern bogs), but also in the southeast (pocosins).
Their acreage declined historically, as they were drained to be used as
cropland, and mined for their peat which was used as a fuel and a soil
conditioner. Recently, bogs have been recognized for their role in regulating
the global climate by storing large amounts of carbon in peat deposits. Bogs are
unique communities that can be destroyed in a matter of days, but require
hundreds, if not thousands, of years to form naturally.
Northern bogs are generally associated with low temperatures and short
growing seasons where ample precipitation and high humidity cause excessive
moisture to accumulate. Therefore, most bogs in the United States are found in
the northern states. Northern bogs often form in old glacial lakes. They may
have either considerable amounts of open water surrounded by floating vegetation
or vegetation may have completely filled the lake (terrestrialization). The
sphagnum peats of northern bogs cause especially acidic waters. The result is a
wetland ecosystem with a very specialized and unique flora and fauna that can
grow in these conditions called acidophiles. Nevertheless, bogs support a
numberof species of plants in addition to the characteristic sphagnum moss,
including cotton grass, cranberry, blueberry, pine, Labrador tea, and tamarack.
Moose, deer, and lynx are a few of the animals that can be found in northern
bogs. The greater sandhill crane, the sora rail, and the great gray owl depend
on bogs for survival.
Pocosin
The word pocosin comes from the Algonquin Native American word for
"swamp on a hill". These evergreen shrub and tree dominated landscapes
are found on the Atlantic Coastal Plain from Virginia to northern Florida,
though most are found in North Carolina. Usually, there is no standing water
present in pocosins, but a shallow water table leaves the soil saturated for
much of the year.They range in size from less than an acre to several thousand
acres located between and isolated from old or existing stream systems in most
instances. Because pocosins are found in broad, flat, upland areas far from
large streams, they are ombrotrophic like northern bogs, meaning rain provides
most of their water. Also like the bogs of the far north, pocosins are found on
waterlogged, nutrient poor, acid soils. The soil itself is a mixture of peat and
sand containing large amounts of charcoal from periodic burnings. These natural
fires occur because pocosins periodically become very dry in the spring or
summer. The fires are ecologically important because they increase the diversity
of shrub types in pocosins.
The most common plants are evergreen trees (loblolly bay, red bay, and sweet
bay), and evergreen shrubs (titi, fetterbush, and zenobia). Pocosins provide
important habitat for many animals, including some endangered species like the
red-cockaded woodpecker. They are especially important as the last refuge for
black bears in coastal Virginia and North Carolina, and the red wolf has
recently been reintroduced in North Carolina pocosins.
Functions and values
Habitat is the most valuable function of Pocosins. Some
pocosins are very large and difficult to develop, and so they remain largely
undisturbed. As a result, they are a haven for species adapted to living in
unaltered forests. As more and more land is developed in the Eastern United
States, pocosins are becoming ever more valuable refuges for wildlife. The slow
movement of water through the dense organic matter in pocosins removes excess
nutrients deposited by rainwater. The same organic matter also acidifies the
water. This very pure water is slowly released to estuaries, where it helps to
maintain the proper salinity, nutrients, and acidity. This process is important
to help maintain healthy fish populations important to both commerce and
recreation. Pocosins are also sources of valuable timber and fuel, but these
uses can harm or destroy pocosins if they are not carried out responsibly.
Status
About 1,400 square miles of undisturbed pocosins remain today. By
comparison, more than 3,000 square miles were drained between 1962 and 1979.
Historically, pocosins were mostly threatened by agriculture. Today, timber
harvesting, peat mining, and phosphate mining join agriculture as the biggest
threats to the remaining undisturbed pocosins.
Fens
EPA
Graphic
Fens, are peat-forming wetlands that receive nutrients from sources other
than precipitation: usually from upslope sources through drainage from
surrounding mineral soils and from groundwater movement. Fens differ from bogs
because they are less acidic and have higher nutrient levels. They are therefore
able to support a much more diverse plant and animal community. These systems
are often covered by grasses, sedges, rushes, and wildflowers. Some fens are
characterized by parallel ridges of vegetation separated by less productive
hollows. The ridges of these patterned fens form perpendicular to the downslope
direction of water movement. Over time, peat may build up and separate the fen
from its groundwater supply. When this happens, the fen receives fewer nutrients
and may become a bog.
Like bogs, fens are mostly a northern hemisphere phenomenon -- occurring in
the northeastern United States, the Great Lakes region, the Rocky Mountains, and
much of Canada -- and are generally associated with low temperatures and short
growing seasons, where ample precipitation and high humidity cause excessive
moisture to accumulate. Functions & Values Fens, like bogs, provide
important benefits in a watershed, including preventing or reducing the risk of
floods, improving water quality, and providing habitat for unique plant and
animal communities.
Status
Like most peatlands, fens experienced a decline in acreage at a rate
of about eight percent from 1950 to 1970, mostly from mining and draining for
cropland, fuel, and fertilizer. Because of the large historical loss of this
ecosystem type, remaining fens
Data
compiled from The British Antarctic Study, NASA, Environment Canada,
UNEP, EPA and other sources as stated and credited Researched
by Charles Welch-Updated dailyThis Website is a project of the The
Ozone Hole Inc. a 501(c)(3) Nonprofit Organization