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  2. Environmental impacts of beavers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_impacts_of...

    Photo of Baugh Creek, Idaho, illustrates how a string of beaver ponds in a barren, post-wildfire landscape, serves as wildlife refugia and potentially as firebreaks. Beaver dam visible at bottom of image. Courtesy of Prof. Joe Wheaton. Beaver and their associated ponds and wetlands may be overlooked as effective wildfire-fighting tools. [71]

  3. Wetland conservation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wetland_conservation

    Wetland conservation is aimed at protecting and preserving areas of land including marshes, swamps, bogs, and fens that are covered by water seasonally or permanently due to a variety of threats from both natural and anthropogenic hazards. Some examples of these hazards include habitat loss, pollution, and invasive species.

  4. Wetlands of Louisiana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wetlands_of_Louisiana

    Atchafalaya Basin. The wetlands of Louisiana are water-saturated coastal and swamp regions of southern Louisiana, often called "Bayou".. The Louisiana coastal zone stretches from the border of Texas to the Mississippi line [1] and comprises two wetland-dominated ecosystems, the Deltaic Plain of the Mississippi River (unit 1, 2, and 3) and the closely linked Chenier Plain (unit 4). [2]

  5. Aquatic ecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquatic_ecosystem

    For example, wetland plants may produce dense canopies that cover large areas of sediment—or snails or geese may graze the vegetation leaving large mud flats. Aquatic environments have relatively low oxygen levels, forcing adaptation by the organisms found there. For example, many wetland plants must produce aerenchyma to

  6. Peatland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peatland

    Wetlands make up about 5-8% of Earth's terrestrial land surface but contain about 20-30% of the planet's 2500 Gt soil carbon stores. [49] Peatlands contain the highest amounts of soil organic carbon of all wetland types. [50] Wetlands can become sources of carbon, rather than sinks, as the decomposition occurring within the ecosystem emits ...

  7. Geography and ecology of the Everglades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_and_ecology_of...

    Although the region appears flat, the wearing away of the limestone in some areas created slight valleys and plateaus—a difference of inches in elevation—that affected not only the flow of water, but also types of vegetation present. The Everglades are unique; no other wetland system in the world is nourished primarily from the atmosphere. [5]

  8. Edge effects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edge_effects

    Edge effects in biological assays refer to artifacts in data that are caused by the position of the wells on a screening plate rather than a biological effect. [ citation needed ] The edge effect in scanning electron microscopy is the phenomenon in which the number of secondary and/or backscattered electrons that escape the sample and reach the ...

  9. Portal:Wetlands/Selected article - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Wetlands/Selected...

    The wetland status of 7,000 plants is determined upon information contained in a list compiled in the National Wetland Inventory undertaken by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and developed in cooperation with a federal inter-agency review panel (Reed, 1988). The National List was compiled in 1988 with subsequent revisions in 1996 and 1998.