Wetlands are a link between land and water, and the world's most productive ecosystem. Some common names for different types of wetlands are marshes, bogs and marshes. Depending on the type of wetland, it may fill mainly trees, grasses, shrubs and moss. To be called a wetland, the area must be filled with water or soaked in at least one year. Some wetlands are actually dry at some point in the year!
By suppressing floods and keeping the river at a normal level, wetlands will also be like sponges. The wetland filters and purifies water as it flows through the wetland system. Plants found in wetlands will help control water erosion
Wetlands are generally considered "moist", but wetlands may not be covered with water all year round. In fact, some of the most important and diverse wetlands on Earth are only seasonally moist. Wetlands are formed by saturation of the groundwater surface under certain hydrological conditions. Wetlands can be thought of as natural sponges that absorb water on the surface, rain, snow, groundwater, floods that need to be stored and release them slowly. The water in wetlands can be static or fluid, fresh, salty, salty, or even underground.
Wetlands are a link between land and water, and the world's most productive ecosystem. Some common names for different types of wetlands are marshes, bogs and marshes. Depending on the type of wetland, it may fill mainly trees, grasses, shrubs and moss. To be called a wetland, the area must be filled with water or soaked in at least one year. Some wetlands are actually dry at some point in the year!
Knowledge on the restoration and creation of inland freshwater wetlands such as ponds, forest wetlands and wetlands and wetlands is much less. Most of these wetlands know that outside water bodies such as ponds and related herbaceous vegetation restore and form a dominant pool. Little is known about the exchange of forest swamp because of the time necessary for woody vegetation to mature. However, experts agree that ecosystems that are least likely to be successfully replaced are wetlands and wetlands. These are wetlands with deep organic soils that have been developed for thousands of years and have difficult (if not impossible) replicated hydrological conditions.