Ontario Nature Blog
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© Lora Denis
Altberg Wildlife Sanctuary Nature Reserve © Kawartha Field Naturalists
As it turns out, you do.
In a recent blog, we highlighted how wetlands benefit wildlife, but there is more to them than that. They benefit all life (including us) in many different ways.
Ontario’s wetlands are disappearing at an alarming rate and we need your help to tell the government why they should be protected. To this end, we took to the streets to find out why wetlands are important to you.
Here’s what you had to say:
“They’re nature’s way of managing water” – Frank Jonkman, Town of Bradford West Gwillimbury. Wetlands provide flood protection by absorbing water and slowly releasing it across the floodplain. This is especially true in urban areas!
“The ecosystem services they provide are not just for wildlife, but for people too” – Courtney Beaver, University of Toronto graduate student. Wetlands improve water quality by replenishing groundwater and filtering drinking water.
“Losing wetlands is a huge loss for recreation and natural education in Ontario” – Kali Anevich, recreational hunter and outdoor education teacher in Northern Ontario. Wetlands provide crucial recreation opportunities such as hunting, fishing, birdwatching, wildlife photography, hiking, canoeing, kayaking and more!
“The built up areas that surround the wetland provide ample shade shelter for my cattle in the hot afternoons.” – Kali Buck Calabrese, Dairy Farmer in Peterborough County. Wetland vegetation prevents shoreline and stream bank erosion by holding the soil in place with their roots and absorbing the wave energy of streams and rivers.
“They’re the lungs of the planet.” – Deanna Lindblad, Niagara Peninsula Conservation Authority.
The Government of Ontario has completed its first round of public consultation for a Strategic Plan for Ontario Wetlands and will release the draft strategy for public review early in 2016.
“Wetlands have always been important places for First Nations. They provided food and medicines for our survival.” – Clayton Coppaway, First Nations Scientist. Wetland ecosystems provide us with food such as fish, waterfowl and cranberries, as well as energy in the form of lumber and peat.
Please tell us why you care about wetlands, and encourage your friends and family to do the same. If we don’t show that these wet and wonderful places mean something to us, we risk losing them and their benefits forever.
Northern leopard frog © Jozsef Szasz-Fabian
The wetlands help to filter runoff, provide breeding grounds for bird reptiles insects and countless other critters. All are important to maintaining a health balance. Without mosquitoes we would lose so many song birds which you might think aren’t important. They aren’t just pretty, they are pollunators, food for others and help fill the void of silence with music not created by humans. It’s a system of nature that has worked since the beginning of time so if you want to mess with the water supply, you mess with our very existance.
All that, but fail to mention wetlands make up 4% of the land on the planet, but entrain/sequester 25% of the worlds Carbon? Editor! 🙂