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OKIsItJustMe

(19,933 posts)
Wed Mar 7, 2012, 11:01 AM Mar 2012

Artificial Wetlands Can Provide Benefits over the Long Haul

http://www.aibs.org/bioscience-press-releases/120307_artificial_wetlands_can_provide_benefits_over_the_long_haul.html
[font face=Times,Times New Roman,Serif][font size=5]Artificial Wetlands Can Provide Benefits over the Long Haul[/font]

March 2012

[font size=3]Read the full article (PDF)

Wetlands created to replace those lost to environmental degradation or development take up carbon from the atmosphere and so potentially reduce greenhouse warming, a unique 15-year study suggests. Such artificial wetlands caused emissions of methane, which may contribute to warming, smaller than those from natural wetlands.

William J. Mitsch, of the University of Florida Gulf Coast University in Naples and his colleagues, describe the development of two 1-hectare wetlands in Ohio created by pumping water from the nearby Olentangy River, starting in 1994. One was manually planted with vegetation, and the other was left to develop naturally.

The results, reported in the March issue of BioScience, show that over time the manually planted and the unplanted wetlands differed principally in the variety of plants present and in how much gas they exchanged with the atmosphere. The manually planted wetland showed more variety, but the unplanted one took up more carbon from the atmosphere. Methane emissions from the unplanted wetland, unlike the planted one, meant that it was estimated to contribute slightly to net greenhouse warming. Both created wetlands, however, removed large amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus from the incoming river water. Emissions of nitrous oxide, which can also increase warming, were small.

This study may prove useful as a model for future wetland reclamation or replacement projects and for determining the amount of human intervention that is necessary for these projects to be successful. The article also provides an example of the benefits of long-term ecological research, since species diversity stabilized only after about five years, and the amount of carbon retained in the soil continued to increase over the entire study.

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Artificial Wetlands Can Provide Benefits over the Long Haul (Original Post) OKIsItJustMe Mar 2012 OP
Better that we don't destroy NATURAL wetlands in the first place. kestrel91316 Mar 2012 #1
Well, that goes without saying OKIsItJustMe Mar 2012 #2
My first thought too. hunter Mar 2012 #3

OKIsItJustMe

(19,933 posts)
2. Well, that goes without saying
Wed Mar 7, 2012, 12:38 PM
Mar 2012

The question is, what do we do about the ones which we’ve already destroyed?

hunter

(38,264 posts)
3. My first thought too.
Wed Mar 7, 2012, 01:56 PM
Mar 2012

I wouldn't want to see developers running with this... "We'll destroy this natural wetland here and build new wetland there."

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