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Cleaner Water

Perhaps the greatest gift of wetlands is clean water.  Because water moves more slowly in a wetland and the vegetation is rich and diverse, there is time and opportunity for biological and chemical processes to occur. These natural processes remove nutrient contamination, other pollutants, and suspended sediment from the water.

Water lilies in bloom in a wetland

Fertilizer, manure, and municipal wastewater all add nitrogen and phosphorus to our rivers and streams. If the nitrogen is not removed, it enters our streams and rivers and, eventually, our coastal bays and estuaries.

An aerial photograph shows hypoxic areas blooming as nutrient-laden water from the Mississippi enters the Gulf.

Marine algae feed on these nutrients, overpopulate, and, as they decompose, siphon oxygen from the water. This creates low-oxygen “dead zones”—known as hypoxia—along our coastlines that are uninhabitable to aquatic life. Today, the "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico reaches the size of Massachusetts. Restored wetlands can help clean the water by removing these nutrients before they reach the ocean.

Read more about nutrient management

Read more about the "dead zone"

 

 

Mission Statement

The Wetlands Initiative is  dedicated to restoring the wetland resources of the Midwest to improve water quality, increase wildlife habitat and biodiversity, and reduce flood damage.