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Wetland
A wetland is a depression of land which contains water for
all or most of the year. Prairie wetlands get their water from snow, rain, and
groundwater. Wetlands can be large or small, shallow or deep. They can be filled
with plants from one end to the other, or they can be open water with plants
growing mostly around the edges. The different types of wetland that can be
found in Winnipeg and the surrounding area include: Swamps - a wetland dominated
by trees or shrubs. Marshes - a wetland frequently or continually filled with
water, with plants that are adapted to growing in wet or saturated soils.
Potholes - shallow marshlike ponds that may not hold water during periods of dry
weather Fens - a wetland with marshlike vegetation that develops in an area of
organic solids (peat) that receives some water draining from surrounding mineral
soils Bogs - a wetland dominated by mosses and conifer trees that develops in an
area of organic soils (peat) and no inflows or outflows of water. Within a
wetland there can be a number of different zones, where habitat conditions vary,
depending on the level of the water. A wet meadow is an area with wet soils but
no open water. Plants growing here need more moisture than the drier prairie
plants but do not like to be flooded for very long each year. The area called
the emergent marsh occurs where the water is shallow around the edges of marshes
and potholes. Plants living here are able to grow in standing water and are tall
enough to emerge above the water to reach the sunlight. If the water level in
the wetland drops, the emergent marsh can become an exposed mudflat. If this
area stays without water for some time, plants that do not like to be flooded
will begin to grow here. An area of permanent open water can be found in some
larger marshes and swamps. Plants growing in this deeper water may appear to be
floating on the surface but most have stems and leaves that are submerged below
the water.
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