Difference between revisions of "Wetland"

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A '''Wetland''' is an area that is wet due to a close relationship to a body of [[water]] or groundwater, or a land area that is flooded regularly.  Wetlands support vegetation adapted for life in saturated soil conditions.<ref>http://www.nwrc.usgs.gov/fringe/glossary.html</ref>
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A '''Wetland''' is an area that is wet due to a close relationship to a body of [[water]] or groundwater, or a land area that is flooded regularly.  Wetlands support [[vegetation]] adapted for life in saturated soil conditions.<ref>http://www.nwrc.usgs.gov/fringe/glossary.html</ref> Frequently a centerpiece in Property Rights fights, a long running case, Rapanos v. US reached the US Supreme Court with a victory for landowner John Rapanos in 2006, limiting the Federal Governments reach on non navigable waterways and adjacent wetlands.<ref>[http://wetlandresearch.com/wiki/index.php?title=Rapanos_v._US Rapanos v. US Wetlands]</ref>
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Many wetlands are seen as reserves for wildlife by environmentalist [[liberal]]s who want to stagnate economic growth by preventing development on them.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 21:40, July 13, 2016

A Wetland is an area that is wet due to a close relationship to a body of water or groundwater, or a land area that is flooded regularly. Wetlands support vegetation adapted for life in saturated soil conditions.[1] Frequently a centerpiece in Property Rights fights, a long running case, Rapanos v. US reached the US Supreme Court with a victory for landowner John Rapanos in 2006, limiting the Federal Governments reach on non navigable waterways and adjacent wetlands.[2]

Many wetlands are seen as reserves for wildlife by environmentalist liberals who want to stagnate economic growth by preventing development on them.

References

  1. http://www.nwrc.usgs.gov/fringe/glossary.html
  2. Rapanos v. US Wetlands