Natural Wetlands in Canada Paper

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rrgbeerf

Humanities

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This topic focuses on renewable energy in Canada. What are the challenges and opportunities to the development and expansion of renewable energy sources in Canada? Your answer should provide a discussion on the current situation (e.g., types of renewable energy being used; methods being developed or expanded upon, etc.) as well as a view to the future (perhaps the next 20 to 30 years). Use some specific examples to help explain your answer. You can take a national perspective or more regional (e.g., a province or region such as the prairie provinces, or the Canadian north)

Discuss the importance of natural wetlands in Canada. Why are they ecologically significant, what are the human-related activities that are adversely affecting them, and what are some of the conservation methods being used to protect them? Some examples (case studies) will help you answer this question.


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Audit Sampling Outline
The judgmental sampling is used when there is a time limit for taking a test, and professionals
who are included tend to use them based on their intuition rather than other research strategies
(Steven and Jaime, 2017).


Running head: IMPORTANCE OF NATURAL WETLANDS IN CANADA

Importance of Natural Wetlands in Canada
Student’s Name
Institutional Affiliation
Date

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IMPORTANCE OF NATURAL WETLANDS IN CANADA

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Introduction
Canada is covered by 14 percent of wetlands. They are widely distributed in Canada. This
paper provides an analysis of the benefits of the wetlands in Canada, the reasons why they are
ecologically significant, the human-related activities that adversely affect them, and the
conservation methods.
Why are they ecologically significant?
Improve the quality of water
Surface water runoff from urban communities, towns, streets, agribusiness, mining, and
ranger service activities may contain residue, abundance supplements, infections and pathogens,
and an assortment of synthetic substances. If this runoff moves through a wetland, the wetland
demonstrations like a channel to evacuate residue, ingest supplements, and organically change
numerous synthetics into less unsafe structures as the case is with the MacKenzie River Basin
wetlands. "Treatment wetlands" can be explicitly planned and developed to improve surface
water quality, for example, artificial wetlands to treat stormwater runoff. Common wetlands can
play out similar functions (Daborn and Redden, 2016). However, care is required not to "overburden" these frameworks. The limit of wetlands to kill destructive substances is restricted; an
excess of overflow can debase or pulverize the swamp. For instance, an excessive number of
supplements, (for example, phosphorus) entering a wetland can cause algal sprouts
(eutrophication) which decreases the oxygen content in the water, killing fish and other natural
life.
They reduce flood damage

IMPORTANCE OF NATURAL WETLANDS IN CANADA

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Wetlands can decrease flooding by keeping down pinnacle water streams when water
levels are high and putting away water inside the swamp. Therefore, resulting in increasingly
continuous releases of water over a more extended period, which can shield downstream
landowners from flood damage. A recent report by the Wrubleski, Badio, and Goldsborough
(2016), confirmed that the loss of 3500 hectares of wetland close to in Canada increases flood
damage expen...


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