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Wetlands: Ephemeral Sanctuaries
Seasonal wetlands occur naturally on every continent. Within the space of a few days, waters saturate the ground and transform the landscape. These periodic wetlands comprise a great diversity of ecosystems. Among them, grassy marshes and inlets, wet meadows, and vast temporary lakes.
Today, wetland protection is a conservation policy priority. Just as rainforests are often referred to as the “lungs of the Earth”, the wetlands, which filter water and replenish a significant part of the planet’s freshwater reservoirs, can be called its “kidneys.” But
Seasonal wetlands occur naturally on every continent. Within the space of a few days, waters saturate the ground and transform the landscape. These periodic wetlands comprise a great diversity of ecosystems. Among them, grassy marshes and inlets, wet meadows, and vast temporary lakes.
Today, wetland protection is a conservation policy priority. Just as rainforests are often referred to as the “lungs of the Earth”, the wetlands, which filter water and replenish a significant part of the planet’s freshwater reservoirs, can be called its “kidneys.” But human activity and climate change are threatening to destroy the delicate balance of the world’s wetland ecosystems. To protect and restore these transitional zones that perform significant environmental functions, scientists, forest rangers, and indigenous communities are working together to find on-the-ground conservation solutions.