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Your Watershed - It Matters!

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Learn about your watershed

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  • Shorelines & Estuaries

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    Vital Parts of the WatershedEstuaries are bodies of water partly surrounded by land where fresh water from rivers and streams runs into and mixes with salt water from the ocean. Estuary is another name for bay, sound, inlet, harbor, lagoon - anywhere there is the mixing of fresh and salt water. There are 102 estuaries in the U.S. according to the EPA. Of these, 28 have been designated by their states and the federal government to be of national importance.

    Estuaries have many different types of habitats including shellfish beds, sea grass meadows, salt and fresh marshes, forested wetlands, beaches, river deltas, and rocky shores. Among the most productive natural systems on earth due to the mixing of nutrients from land and sea, estuaries provide more food per acre than the richest Midwest-ern farmland. Estuaries and coastal waters provide essen-tial habitat for over 75% of the commercial fish catch and 80-90% of the recre-ational catch of fish.

    As more and more people move to our coastlines and estuaries, it is important to un-derstand the role these areas play in healthy watersheds.

    To lessen our harmful impacts, it is important to minimize bulkheads, docks, and shoreline structures. When pos-sible consider soft erosion control methods which use natural materials such as gravel, sand, logs, and root masses to absorb wave energy.

    PHOTO CREDIT: Rocks on Cannon Beach from http://www.flickr.com/photos/paraflyer/2210170066/ by paraflyer, Tobias. Accessed June 2011. Reproduced under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

  • Carbon - Another Natural CycleAll organic life is based on the chemical element carbonCarbon forms compounds with other elements and is present in a diversity of states including gases (carbon dioxide), solid minerals (limestone), and soft tissues (all plant and animal parts). The carbon cycle is the movement of carbon through living organisms, oceans, the atmosphere and the crust of the planet.

    The earth maintains a natural carbon balance, slowly working to remove carbon from the atmosphere. Natural carbon removal doesnt keep up the pace of the rapid rate in which humans are moving carbon into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels, so carbon in the atmosphere is increasing faster than nature can process it.

    Carbon continually exchanges within a closed system consisting of the atmosphere, oceans, biosphere, and landmass. There are short- and long- term cycles at work.

    Short-Term Carbon Cycles:Carbon is exchanged rapidly between plants and animals through respiration and photosynthesis, and through gas exchange between the oceans and the atmosphere. Long-Term Carbon Cycle:

    Over millions of years, carbon in the air is combined with

    water to form weak acids that very slowly

    dissolve rocks.

    This carbon is carried to the oceans where some forms coral reefs and shells. These sediments may be moved deep into the earth by drifting

    continents and eventually

    released into the atmosphere by

    volcanoes.

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  • 1. WRP-YOUR WATER-What is a Watershed2. WRP-Wetlands-Natures Sponge3. WRP-Major Threats to Wetlands4. WRP-Shorelines and Estruaries5. WRP-Salmon and Watersheds6. WRP-Soils are a part of the Watershed7. WRP-YOUR WATER-Natural Cycles8. WRP - Carbon-Another Cycle9. WRP - What is the Greenhouse Effect10. WRP-YOUR WATER-Stewardship- How Healthy are our Streams n Lakes11.WRP-Curb pet and animal waste12. WRP-An Abundance of Trees13. WRP-YOUR WATER.Drinking Water14. WRP-YOUR WATER-Well and Septic15. WRP-YOUR WATER-Resources16. WRP-YOUR WATER-Water Discussion Course