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“WATER” YOU WAITING FOR? Please get your interactive notebook! Please power up! Please read the board!

Please get your interactive notebook! Please power up! Please read the board!

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Page 1: Please get your interactive notebook!  Please power up!  Please read the board!

“WATER” YOU WAITING FOR? Please get your

interactive notebook!

Please power up!

Please read the board!

Page 2: Please get your interactive notebook!  Please power up!  Please read the board!

NEXT STEPS: Map Masters: westsidewolves.org

Find wetlands power point for todayWatch wetlands video carefully -

what is a wetland?How do they help us?

Need to master map: Review map 5 min, then quiz/requiz

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VIDEO: WETLANDS ARE WONDERFUL!

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DIFFERENCES? “RIVER” VS. “WETLAND”

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LEGAL DEFINITION OF A “WETLAND” Wet soils

Anaerobic – lack oxygen; grey in color Water loving plants

ChordgrassBladderwartSedges, rushes, reeds

HydrologyStanding water at least two weeks of the

year

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DIFFERENCES? Wetlands vs.

rivers –Slower waterMore plant

lifeMore shallowMay be

seasonal/ephemeral

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FLOATING WATER PLANTS

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EMERGENT WATER PLANTS

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INTERACTIVE NOTEBOOK: Title: Wetlands Date: March 27

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TOP HALF RIGHT SIDE: Draw a wetland and label these parts:

Wet soilsWater loving plants

Floating plants Emergent plants

Standing water

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WETLAND TYPES• bogs and fens of the northeastern and

north-central states and Alaska• wet meadows or wet prairies in the

Midwest• prairie potholes like the Katy Prairie• playa lakes of the southwest and Great

Plains• bottomland hardwood swamps of the

south• tundra wetlands of Alaska.• Coastal salt marshes or tidal marshes

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ACIDIC ANAEROBIC CONDITIONS IN BOGS PRESERVE ORGANIC MATERIALS

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GALVESTON – TIDAL MARSHES

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SAME PAGE: ECOSYSTEM

SERVICES OF WETLANDS

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CLEANS WATER

FILTERS OUT SEDIMENT (PLANT STEMS/STILL WATER)PROVIDES DECOMPOSITION OPPORTUNITIES (REMOVING PLANT NUTRIENTS, OXYGEN DEMANDING WASTES)

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FLOOD PROTECTION – COHESION OF POLAR WATER IN WET SOILS

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HABITAT AND BIODIVERSITY

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REST STOPS FOR MIGRATORY WATERFOWL

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EROSION PROTECTION DURING STORMS

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NURSERY FOR YOUNG FISH, CRABS, SHRIMP Louisiana's

coastal marshes produce an annual commercial fish and shellfish harvest that amounted to 1.2 billion pounds worth $244 million in 1991.

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WETLANDS HAVE RECREATIONAL, HISTORICAL, SCIENTIFIC, AND CULTURAL VALUES.

• More than half of all U.S. adults (98 million) hunt, fish, birdwatch 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.