National News:
“Over a four-year span, the United States lost more than
360,000 acres of freshwater and saltwater wetlands to fierce storms, sea-level
rise and booming development along the coasts, according to a newly released
federal study.
The disappearance of so much grass and forest marsh on the
edge of waterways is a disturbing sign that government projects to restore
wetlands are failing to keep pace, environmentalists said, as storms intensify,
the sea level creeps up and development paves the way for rising coastal
populations.
Saltwater wetlands help buffer sea surges that cause
flooding during powerful storms along the coasts — such as Hurricane Sandy last
year — and freshwater wetlands soak up storm-water runoff that often causes
sewers to overflow.
They also serve as nurseries for numerous species of fish
and assorted marine life, while providing habitat for three-quarters of the
nation’s waterfowl and migrating birds. Nearly half of endangered species
depend on them to live.”
~Writes Darryl Fears of The Washington Post
Click here to read Mr. Fears’ article
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