On the fringes of the bay, fragile marshes and winding waterways are teeming with birds and wildlife. |
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The landscape of the national parks is endless stretches of salt water marshes rather than canyons or petrified forests. |
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Until late October the birds may be found on estuaries, flooded coastal marshes and farm reservoirs. |
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They prefer life on the shores of deep, clear rivers, lakes, large marshes, and ocean bays. |
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The Romans became practised at draining marshes to rid areas of malaria-carrying mosquitoes. |
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The wetlands, its seeps and its marshes are jealousy maintained and protected from all disturbance. |
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It is a large fresh water lake associated with marshes on the flood plains of the river. |
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Folk are few and far between amid these rounded hills, rocky ridges, peat bogs and marshes. |
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Living in freshwater marshes with areas of open water, they stalk fish, eels, frogs and insects. |
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The distribution of plants in freshwater marshes is driven by competition, inundation and draw-down. |
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Explorer days are also an opportunity to find more about local habitats such as woodlands, bogs, coast and marshes. |
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In the shallow marshes near the river grows a unique type of yellow water lily. |
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Yet too many of the bottom lands, swamps, and marshes that drew me back no longer exist. |
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Methane is often called marsh gas because it forms in swamps and marshes from the underwater decomposition of plant and animal material. |
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The LIttle Grassbird is found in swamps and marshes, preferring thick reed beds, and will occur in temporary wetlands after rains. |
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In their tropical African home Egyptian geese frequent rivers, marshes and lakes resorting to a wide range of nesting sites. |
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The marshes at the mouth of the Rio Tempisque at Palo Verde National Park are the last stronghold of the jabiru in Central America. |
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In the marshes, keep an eye out for the papyrus gonolek and the often sought-after shoebill stork. |
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As long as the tide ebbed, eels were leaving the marshes and running out to sea. |
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Sometimes he goes to watch birds in the suburban marshes, where more rare species can be found. |
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Early on Whit Sunday, 23 May, Marlborough's scouts found the French in a good position on open countryside behind the marshes of the Little Geet. |
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It tells the story of young Pip, who encounters an escaped criminal in a memorably spooky graveyard on the Kentish marshes. |
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As they follow the coast, kestrels often hover above marshes and grasslands, waiting to pounce on rodents, small birds, and insects. |
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Take a ride on the wild side aboard an airboat and travel into the heart and soul of South Louisiana's marshes and swamps. |
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Anatids inhabit aquatic habitats such as lakes, ponds, streams, rivers and marshes. |
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He shall see the marshes gold with flags and kingcups and find shepherd's purse on a slag-heap. |
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In the undergrowth you can see white anemones, while the marshes are punctuated by kingcups and irises. |
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Mostly it consists of sandy woodland and pristine marshes, full of red squirrels and sika deer. |
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Extraction began in 1864 in California and Nevada, after commercially workable deposits were found in alkaline desert marshes. |
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The common reed is a tall perennial grass found in marshes and along river and lake edges. |
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A group of rush cabins nestle among canals that drain the reedy marshes into the open water. |
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Saltwater marshes and ponds dot the landscape, and alligators lazily sun themselves on banks. |
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In the Sandy Pond area, you'll enjoy the beauty of fragile barrier beaches, dunes, lagoons, and freshwater marshes. |
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The alpine pastures and marshes with an amazing variety of wild flowers were most eye-catching. |
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Ospreys live near rivers, estuaries, salt marshes, lakes, reservoirs, and other large bodies of water. |
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They generally prefer open country and can be found in habitat from salt marshes at sea level to areas of alpine tundra at high elevation. |
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To the west, the indigo-blue waters of Pamlico Sound lap grassy marshes thick with egrets and blue herons. |
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Most studies conducted on plant zonation have been within perennial-dominated coastal marshes or non-saline marshes. |
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Pristine beaches, maritime forests, shimmering marshes, and tidal creeks await your exploration. |
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Periwinkle snails ordinarily live in ecological harmony with salt marshes, eating only dead cordgrass and a fungus that grows on the plants. |
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Many thousands of wintering wildfowl feed and roost among the country's estuaries and salt marshes. |
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Dominant features of the refuge include freshwater marshes, lakes, meadows, alkali flats, rimrocks, and sagebrush and juniper uplands. |
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If sea levels rise even a few inches, as is predicted, over the next century, salt water will inundate the freshwater marshes. |
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Like most waders, at high water curlew form large roosts on either the highest saltings or on fields and marshes behind the sea walls. |
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Shrimp farm development can damage other coastal habitats, including salt marshes and freshwater wetlands, according to the foundation report. |
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The Rann, a vast expanse of tidal mud flats and salt marshes, take up much of Kachch. |
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To the north and south are sandpits and marshes so thick they resemble oil slicks. |
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All around our coastline we have estuaries, docks, harbours, marshes and breakwaters. |
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His earlier ancestors had prowled the delta marshes near Bubastis, and lived as hunters and fowlers for millennia. |
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For a different approach to birding, everyone should experience the birds of our bayside marshes and outer beaches. |
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On the bay side, there are saltwater marshes, such as Skeleton Hill Island on Sandy Hook. |
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American Black Ducks are historically found in forested wetlands, tidewater areas, and coastal marshes of eastern North America. |
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Its calls epitomise the atmosphere of the lonely marshes and tideways where it is found. |
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Farmers' savings were sucked away into repairing buildings, clearing woods, draining marshes, and buying animals. |
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Living among creeks, lagoons, and salt marshes makes fishing and the salt trade part of everyday life in the area. |
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They are commonly found along the continental or insular shelves as well as freshwater estuaries or mangrove marshes. |
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Salt marshes form in shallow, quiet water, where the water is salty and still enough for the suspended particles to settle to the bottom. |
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Salt marshes cover the central belt, where there are also large phosphate deposits. |
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In summer, two kinds of jewelweeds, or touch-me-nots, bloom in the marshes, one with orange flowers and the other with pale yellow ones. |
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His soldiers leveled their villages and his engineers diverted and drained the water that gave the marshes life. |
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Here tens of thousands of semi-palmated sandpipers and other shorebirds feed on the rich salt marshes that dominate the landscape. |
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In the marshes and stream banks are green dragon, blue flag irises, swamp white oak, silver maple, bladder nut, poison ivy, bulrush, and willow. |
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The only sound was the sigh of the wind across the Pripyat marshes, accelerating to a low moan among the squat blocks of flats. |
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A twitchers ' paradise, the surrounding wetlands and marshes are protected by Birdwatch Ireland. |
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The dead marshes, with their unburied soldiers could be seen as the First World War trenches where Tolkien fought. |
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Chezzetcook Inlet on the Eastern Shore is an attractive body of water with extensive salt marshes and mudflats, but it has a problem. |
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During migration and winter, they are coastal, foraging on mudflats, salt marshes, estuaries, and coastal pools. |
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The river channel meanders through wide tidal freshwater marshes of cattail and sedges, with stands of saltmarsh cordgrass along the upper banks. |
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In the natural realm, there is the muskiness of marshes, the bright slap of scent in a mountain meadow, the dusky breath of desert. |
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In the wild, the plant grows in infertile, moist, sandy soil near streams and marshes. |
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Great Blue Herons inhabit sheltered, shallow bays and inlets, sloughs, marshes, wet meadows, shores of lakes, and rivers. |
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You come from unquiet country into rooms the marshes empty to at low tide. Region of seed kind. |
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Navigation channels and pipeline canals have brought saltwater into freshwater marshes, slowly killing them. |
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During migration and winter, snipes can also be found in salt marshes, estuaries, and other mucky areas. |
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We woke to the merry sound of oyster-catchers and curlews busily nesting in the marshes and tried to trace the haunting drum of snipe in flight. |
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The cranberry is a native American wetland plant that is grown in open bogs and marshes. |
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Mudflats lie lower in the upper intertidal zone than marshes and are smooth, almost level surfaces across which tidal creeks meander. |
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The upper estuary has a single main channel that meanders through extensive fresh and salt marshes. |
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One who does not know the topography of mountains and forests, ravines and defiles, wetlands and marshes cannot maneuver the army. |
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California red-legged frogs breed in aquatic habitats such as streams, ponds, marshes, and stock ponds. |
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The squacco heron is a summer migrant from sub-Saharan Africa to the marshes of southern Europe. |
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The low desert also has some scattered palm oases, alkaline sinks, desert marshes, and permanent streams. |
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Despite its distinctive appearance people rarely see star-nosed moles because they live only in marshes and wetlands. |
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This area of grazing marshes is now a nature reserve and includes woodland, marsh and heathland, and can be explored on marked trails. |
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They inhabit salt marshes near the sea, and are able to seal the shell with the operculum and so survive dry periods buried in mud. |
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We walked across the marshes where grounded boats found themselves stranded many years ago and are being slowly consumed by the land. |
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Recent ornithological events on the lower Bure marshes, near Yarmouth, have reminded me of my earliest bird-watching days. |
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Further to the west the tidal shoreline contains sandy accretions, silt and large detrital mats at the outfall of marshes. |
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Builders and developers converged on unbuilt lands that included marshes and hillsides. |
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It wants to chart the changing landscape of the area and its transformation from marshes to a new town. |
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South Moravia is home to extensive marshes, oxbow lakes and the largest fragments of hardwood floodplain forest in Central Europe. |
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The Great Reed Warbler breeds in reed beds of eutrophic lakes and marshes over much of the Palearctic temperate region. |
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Fallen pillars and supports littered the streets, and all that could be heard was the sound of the wind gently blowing across the marshes. |
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The marshes are excellent areas to see red-winged blackbirds, swallows, Virginia rails, and yellow-headed blackbirds. |
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These birds require shallow water habitats for feeding such as streams, ponds, lakes, marshes, swamps, wetlands, and flooded fields. |
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Visit ponds, swamps, fragile marshes, and pretty beaches along the Chesapeake, or fish the area's many streams and rivers. |
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They can live in freshwater and coastal marine habitats, including rivers, lakes, marshes, swamps, and estuaries. |
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Depending on the species, they may be found in freshwater, brackish, or marine areas including estuaries, swamps, marshes, and tidepools. |
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They usually breed in marshes and brushy swamps with some open water, dense, low vegetation, and perches for singing. |
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The north Kent marshes, which run from Gravesend to Whitstable, are a home and breeding ground for ducks, geese, swans and waders. |
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He was the syndic of the lessees of the royal salt marshes of Peccais, an integral part of the gabelle. |
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Intensive efforts are being made to create new fens and marshes, and restore existing ones, to increase its numbers. |
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From the marshes, fens and river-banks, rushes and reeds were harvested for use in thatching, with tons needed just for one dwelling. |
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The bogs, fens, and estuarine marshes in the Lower Fraser Valley and Fraser Delta of British Columbia support large vegetable growing operations. |
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It is usually found in saturated soils and thus colonizes a range of habitats including marshes, fens, shallow lakes and salt marshes. |
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He ordered the nearby swamps and marshes in the city of Salinus to be drained, in order to prevent an unknown pestilence, probably malaria. |
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Prairie pothole marshes were present in two small prairie potholes that often dry completely in the summer. |
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In springtime, the tule marshes trapped floodwaters, and for miners and early travelers they were yet another obstacle to movement. |
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Thus, we start in the polar ice and tundra, move on to grasslands, thence to rain forests and marshes, then uplands, seaboards and maritime civilisations. |
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The coastal villages where the salt makers lived stand on islands or peninsulas of firm ground, with marshes and fens on their inland side and salt marshes on the seaward. |
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The estuaries and salt marshes of the Solway Firth, in southwest Scotland, are feeding and roosting grounds for many thousands of wintering wildfowl. |
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Redfish, especially, stay in the marshes and bayous all year. |
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Salicornes are these wild little plants that grow in salt marshes. |
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The Abkhaz coast appears, fringed with palms, oleanders and groves of eucalyptus trees planted long ago by the Russians to dry out the malarial marshes. |
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In these treatments, habitats listed for this grass include marshes, bottomland forests, river banks, exposed bars and shores, and open ruderal areas. |
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We were based near Parthenay, in an area noted for its rolling pastureland, reclaimed marshes, and a pretty breed of red beef cattle, the Parthenaise. |
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The ditches, dikes and reed-edged fleets that crisscross the grazing marshes here are rich in invertebrates, including the scarce emerald damselfly. |
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Traveling by airboat over thick, floating marshes and rounded levees, he enthusiastically points at countless alligators, scurrying nutrias, and several bald eagle nests. |
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It was obvious, even in the 1950s, that the sediments of the historic spring floods no longer reached their natural resting grounds in levees, swamps, and marshes. |
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Fish shooting is a sport in Vermont and every spring, hunters break out their artillery and head to the marshes to exercise their right to shoot fish. |
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Westmorland marshes are apparently frequented mostly by the greylag geese though there is some hope that the pinkfoots may eventually be found in increasing numbers. |
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Many land companies began to lease sections of the marshes to individuals with exclusive rights to hunt, harvest alligators, and trap abundant muskrats and other furbearers. |
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The medium-tall salt grass is found in salt and brackish coastal marshes and can grow into large monocultures. It is an important food source for geese and other birds. |
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And so we're working on plans to create villages on the periphery of the marshes where we can provide quick egress and ingress to go into it and back out. |
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There were marshes and a salmon river nearby and I found a lake with trout or whatever. |
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Cattail-thronged marshes here host canvasbacks, redheads, and swans, along with buffleheads, common golden-eyes, teals, and even some bald and golden eagles. |
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If you lose the marshes and the vegetation, all you're left with is mud, which just slides into the water. |
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Inland populations inhabit lakes, open swamps and marshes, and rivers. |
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It is possible that it represents an entirely artificial channel, constructed when the marshes were drained as a replacement for this natural watercourse. |
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This is a region dotted with Chotts, lakes and salt marshes that expand and subtract with the seasons, attracting vast flights of birds as well as herds. |
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These marshes provide nursery habitat for fish and shellfish. |
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At Surlingham, for instance, it became scarce very quickly when a pair of Montagu's harriers nested for five years in succession on one of my marshes near the River Yare. |
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Its mud-flats, sand dunes and salt marshes attract an array of unusual birds, which accounts for the number of twitchers with binoculars and long-lens cameras on the island. |
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Most mainland and island salt marshes are grazed by cattle or sheep. |
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These plants, known as halophytes, include a large taxonomic variety and occupy diverse habitats, from extremely dry to temporarily waterlogged sites or salt marshes. |
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Walking the ancient driftway through the marshes, we paused by the derelict drainage mill to watch the aerial manoeuvres of a mixed flight of golden plovers and lapwings. |
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Between the cliffs and the sea, the rhythmic movement of the tides is forming a new tidal marsh that includes mudflats, tidal creeks, tidal marshes, and tracts of shrubs. |
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The salt marsh harvest mouse is a small nocturnal rodent that makes its home and all of its meals out of pickleweed, a native plant growing in the salt marshes. |
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When in coastal marshes, they are more omnivorous than most dabbling ducks, with mollusks, crustaceans, and arthropods making up nearly half of their diet. |
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The salt marshes support cord grass, marsh samphire and sea purslane. |
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Conversely, under the influence of southerly winds, the sea invaded the coastal zone of the deltaic platform, infilling the salt marshes and lagoons. |
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The river is lined with low bluffs alternating with wetlands, the latter either lightly wooded swamps or open marshes often locally dominated by a single plant species. |
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Sites visited included the Gaudalquiver Delta, Bonanza saltpans, grass lowlands and marshes, and also wooded hills and mountains. |
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In marshes and savannas, Rhynchospora may be the dominant form of vegetation. |
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The ephydrids are especially prominent around inland salt and alkaline ponds and marshes and thermal and mineral springs. |
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Consequently Goosefoots are often found in salt marshes, or in desert areas where water collects and then evaporates, leaving salts in the soil. |
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However, a lot of wildlife also depends on the cliffs, salt marshes and sand dunes of the adjoining shores, the seabed and the open sea itself. |
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They were pursued by the Romans across the river causing some Roman losses in the marshes of Essex. |
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Drainage systems evolved slowly, and began primarily as a means to drain marshes and storm runoff. |
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During the High Middle Ages, many forests and marshes were cleared and cultivated. |
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Woods, hedgerows, mountain slopes and marshes host heather, wild grasses, gorse and bracken. |
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Artificial levees block spring flood water that would bring fresh water and sediment to marshes. |
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Canals dug for the oil and gas industry also allow storms to move sea water inland, where it damages swamps and marshes. |
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Bangladesh has an abundance of wildlife in its forests, marshes, woodlands and hills. |
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Finally, Beowulf tears Grendel's arm from his body at the shoulder and Grendel runs to his home in the marshes where he dies. |
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The Massasauga is emphatically a species of the prairies and their swamps and marshes. |
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Lok got to his feet and wandered along by the marshes towards the mere where Fa had disappeared. |
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There were occasions on which fights would break out on the marshes in dispute of the teams that were allowed to use the best pitches. |
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The Campsie Fells and the marshes between Loch Lomond and Stirling may have represented another boundary. |
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Local Gower salt marsh lamb is produced from sheep which are raised in the salt marshes of the Loughor estuary. |
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When discovered, Bermuda was uninhabited and mostly dominated by forests of Bermuda cedar, with mangrove marshes along its shores. |
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The marshes in northern Kuwait and Jahra have become increasingly important as a refuge for passage migrants. |
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In the Eastern United States, the species once bred widely in the Appalachian Plateau near burns, open marshes, meadows, bogs and lakes. |
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The tundra is covered in marshes, lakes, bogs and streams during the warm months. |
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However, not all of the park is coastal, and there are even forests and marshes on the edges of the park. |
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Much of the land around the bay is reclaimed, forming salt marshes used in agriculture. |
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Salt marshes play a large role in the aquatic food web and the delivery of nutrients to coastal waters. |
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Most salt marshes have a low topography with low elevations but a vast wide area, making them hugely popular for human populations. |
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Salt marshes are located among different landforms based on their physical and geomorphological settings. |
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In New Zealand, most salt marshes occur at the head of estuaries in areas where there is little wave action and high sedimentation. |
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Many marine fish use salt marshes as nursery grounds for their young before they move to open waters. |
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Coastal salt marshes can be distinguished from terrestrial habitats by the daily tidal flow that occurs and continuously floods the area. |
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Salt marshes are quite photosynthetically active and are extremely productive habitats. |
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Inundation and sediment deposition on the marsh surface is also assisted by tidal creeks which are a common feature of salt marshes. |
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As with all coastlines, this rise in water levels are predicted to negatively affect salt marshes, by flooding and eroding them. |
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Earlier in the 20th century, it was believed that draining salt marshes would help reduce mosquito populations. |
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Salt marshes are ecologically important providing habitats for native migratory fish and acting as sheltered feeding and nursery grounds. |
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Marshes in their pioneer stages of development will recover more rapidly than mature marshes as they are often first to colonize the land. |
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The salt marshes in the state of Connecticut in the United States have long been an area lost to fill and dredging. |
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Although much effort has gone into restoring salt marshes worldwide, further research is needed. |
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Because salt marshes are often located next to urban areas, they are likely to receive more visitors than remote wetlands. |
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In these protected shores and bays, the green sea turtle habitats include coral reefs, salt marshes, and nearshore seagrass beds. |
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The salt marshes and seagrass beds contain seaweed and grass vegetation, allowing ample habitat for the sea turtles. |
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Aristotle noted that cranes traveled from the steppes of Scythia to marshes at the headwaters of the Nile. |
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Tidal flats, along with intertidal salt marshes and mangrove forests, are important ecosystems. |
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Wetlands, salt marshes, mangroves and adjacent fresh water wetlands are particularly vulnerable to such a squeeze. |
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Limited intervention often includes the succession of haloseres, including salt marshes and sand dunes. |
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It is made up of very extensive salt marshes, major intertidal banks of sand and mud, shallow waters and deep channels. |
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Freshwater habitats include rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, marshes and bogs. |
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Species that nest in marshes must construct a nesting platform to keep the nest dry, particularly in species that nest in tidal marshes. |
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The marsh terns, Trudeau's tern and some Forster's terns nest in inland marshes. |
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Biogenic gas is created by methanogenic organisms in marshes, bogs, landfills, and shallow sediments. |
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Drained marshes will eventually sink below the surrounding water level, increasing the danger from flooding. |
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Surrounded by marshes, Dunkirk boasted old fortifications and the longest sand beach in Europe, where large groups could assemble. |
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As it grew to a population of around 30,000, the surrounding marshes were drained to allow for further expansion. |
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The Avon flows from Bath in the east, through flood plains and areas which were marshes before the city's growth. |
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These birds mainly occupy dense vegetation in damp environments near lakes, marshes or rivers. |
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A bird of wetland areas, it can be seen around lakes, rivers, ponds, marshes and on the sea coast. |
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Outside the breeding season, common frogs live a solitary life in damp places near ponds or marshes or in long grass. |
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Long stretches of beach, sand dunes, marshes, and maritime forests create a unique environment where wind and waves shape the topography. |
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While this destroys land in some places, it creates land elsewhere, most noticeably in marshes where sediment is deposited by flowing water. |
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The pH in marshes tends to be neutral to alkaline, as opposed to bogs, where peat accumulates under more acid conditions. |
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The three main types of marsh are salt marshes, freshwater tidal marshes, and freshwater marshes. |
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Saltwater marshes are found around the world in mid to high latitudes, wherever there are sections of protected coastline. |
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Salt marshes are most commonly found in lagoons, estuaries, and on the sheltered side of shingle or sandspit. |
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These locations allow the marshes to absorb the excess nutrients from the water running through them before they reach the oceans and estuaries. |
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Ranging greatly in both size and geographic location, freshwater marshes make up the most common form of wetland in North America. |
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Restoration is the process of returning marshes to the landscape to replace those lost in the past. |
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Historically this contained marshes and gave the name to the Durotriges, water dwellers, the Celtic tribe of Dorset. |
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Surrounding the river for most of its length, however, were swamps, bogs and marshes. |
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Honorius, however, refused to see beyond his own safety, guaranteed by the dikes and marshes of Ravenna. |
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Other marine habitats include sea grass beds, salt pans, mangroves and salt marshes. |
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The coastal plains exhibit more or less flat, narrow terrain with landforms such as beach ridges, sandbars, and backwater marshes. |
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The state's coastline contains many salt marshes and estuaries, as well as natural ports such as Georgetown and Charleston. |
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Depending on the breed, cattle can survive on hill grazing, heaths, marshes, moors and semidesert. |
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Numerous lakes and marshes mark both peninsulas, and the coast is much indented. |
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The river bank gradually descends to marshes at Joppa Flats beyond downtown Newburyport. |
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The breeding habitat is marshes, bogs, tundra and wet meadows throughout northern Europe and northern Asia. |
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Twites can form large flocks outside the breeding season, sometimes mixed with other finches on coasts and salt marshes. |
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Xylic material and organic sediment were deposited in the supratidal marshes. |
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Sandpipers, plovers, and yellowlegs hug the coasts or seek protected marshes as they traverse the Florida peninsula. |
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Spring peepers live in marshes and other wetlands in eastern and central North America. |
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Arkansas required a louder and deeper tone to reach through the green timber and a raspier bark was preferred for the marshes of Cajun country. |
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In Greek mythology, Hydra was a many-headed water snake that lived in the Lernaean marshes of Argolis. |
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Just recently, for instance, a new species of leopard frog was found in ponds and marshes in New York City. |
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Experts and rumormongers said the duck hunting was finished, that it would be years and even decades before the marshes would come back. |
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Macrofaunal succession and community structure in Salicornia marshes of southern California. |
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It has two marshes, club house, comfort stations, tea shelters, heritage house and a maintenance yard. |
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You had one foot on the asphalt and the other in the marshes. |
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Louisiana's mottled ducks make up well over half of the region's total because of its massive expanse of soft deltaic and chenier plain marshes. |
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They also took water samples from selected bogs and marshes to determine dimethyl sulfide concentrations. |
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Here, I thought, as I looked down at the marshes turned into a photonegative of themselves, water where the land was supposed to be. |
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S nexus and has to come out of the Punjabi Chauvinism and marshes of dollarisation. |
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The target reed species common to the central marshes in Iraq are Phragmites australis and Arundo donax. |
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This is drying watercourses, shrinking marshes and decimating populatons of Iberian Lynx, otter, Egyptian mongoose and the genet. |
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From the fog of smoggy Hampstead marshes to the blistering heat of an Egyptian noon, Peasouper is the epic tale of greed, jealousy and man's inhumanity to camels. |
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Moorland-nesting merlins and golden plovers head downhill and may spend their winters on low-lying farmland or coastal marshes only a few miles from where they bred. |
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Feral horses wander through its moss-covered oak forests, alligators slink through its sulfurous marshes, and, every year, thousands of loggerhead turtles nest on its beaches. |
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The different types of habitats in the area are mangroves, restinga, moist lowland forest and marshes, and moist submontane, montane, and upper montane forests. |
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The regulars started work on a 150-foot-long trestlework through the muddy marshes and began assembling the ponton bridge with two companies on each bank. |
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Rising water is remapping the marshes, too, creating open water as areas gradually become too deep for cordgrass, saltgrass and other salt-tolerant vegetation. |
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Common habitats include bogs, fens, swamps, marshes, the tepuis of Venezuela, the wallums of coastal Australia, the fynbos of South Africa, and moist streambanks. |
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Until recently, a combination of strong sunshine and low humidity or an extension of peat marshes was necessary for producing salt from the sea, the most plentiful source. |
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The coast of the region, extending from southwestern Connecticut to northeastern Maine, is dotted with lakes, hills, marshes and wetlands, and sandy beaches. |
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The shores in this area are a mixture of intertidal mud, sand, and salt flats, estuarine waters, intertidal marshes, freshwater ponds, swamps, and forested peatlands. |
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Ravenna proved to be invulnerable, surrounded by marshes and estuaries and easily supplied by small boats from its hinterlands, as Procopius later pointed out in his History. |
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Gathering the men together into fighting units was made difficult by a shortage of radios and by the terrain, with its hedgerows, stone walls and marshes. |
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In November 1776, methane was first scientifically identified by Italian physicist Alessandro Volta in the marshes of Lake Maggiore straddling Italy and Switzerland. |
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There is a diverse range and combination of methodologies employed to understand the hydrological dynamics in salt marshes and their ability to trap and accrete sediment. |
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This programme has aimed to reconnect the marshes by returning tidal flow along with the ecological functions and characteristics of the marshes back to their original state. |
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Additionally, in the same marshes, the reed Phragmites australis has been invading the area expanding to lower marshes and becoming a dominant species. |
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Urban development of salt marshes has slowed since about 1970 owing to growing awareness by environmental groups that they provide beneficial ecosystem services. |
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Salt marshes do not however require tidal creeks to facilitate sediment flux over their surface although salt marshes with this morphology seem to be rarely studied. |
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Large, shallow coastal embayments can hold salt marshes with examples including Morecambe Bay and Portsmouth in Britain and the Bay of Fundy in North America. |
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Deltaic marshes are associated with large rivers where many occur in Southern Europe such as the Camargue, France in the Rhone delta or the Ebro delta in Spain. |
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This was what led to human groups who were seeking refuge from the inland droughts, expanded along the coastal marshes rich in shellfish and other resources. |
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This has artificially converted many shallow lakes into emergent marshes. |
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Gathering together into fighting units was made difficult by a shortage of radios and by the bocage terrain, with its hedgerows, stone walls, and marshes. |
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As an island surrounded by marshes and meres, the fishing of eels was important as both a food and an income for the abbot and his nearby tenants. |
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The unique geography of the region, with the many bayous, marshes and inlets, can result in water damage across a wide area from major hurricanes. |
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After the departure of the Danes the Fenland rebels remained at large, protected by the marshes, and early in 1071 there was a final outbreak of rebel activity in the area. |
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Alfred was forced to go into hiding for the rest of the winter and spring of 878 in the Somerset marshes in order to avoid the superior Danish forces. |
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