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CAROLINA BAY WETLANDS: UNIQUE HABITATS OF THE SOUTHEASTERN
UNITED STATES
Rebecca
R. Sharitz
Department of Plant Biology, University of Georgia and
Savannah River Ecology Laboratory
Drawer E Aiken, South Carolina, USA 29802
E-mail: Sharitz@srel.edu
Abstract:
Carolina bays, depression wetlands of the southeastern United States Coastal
Plain, are "islands" of high species richness within the upland
landscape and are the major breeding habitat for numerous amphibians.
The 2001 Supreme Court decision that removes isolated wetlands from protection
under the Clean Water Act has potential for great losses of these wetland
ecosystems. Most Carolina bays are not naturally connected with stream
drainages or other water bodies, and their hydrology is driven primarily
by rainfall and evapotranspiration. Their potential interaction with shallow
ground water is not well-understood. Water levels in these wetlands may
vary seasonally and across years from inundated to dry, and organisms
inhabiting Carolina bays must be adapted to fluctuating and often unpredictable
hydrologic conditions. The ecological importance of these wetlands as
habitats for species that require an aquatic environment for a part of
their life cycle has been well-documented. Many Carolina bays have been
drained and converted to agriculture or other uses, and many of the smaller
bays have been poorly inventoried and mapped. If these wetlands are not
protected in the future, a major source of biological diversity in the
southeastern United States will be lost.
Key
Words: depression wetlands, Carolina bays, Delmarva bays, variable
hydrology, amphibian habitat
SREL Reprint
#2704
Sharitz, R. R. 2003.
Carolina Bay wetlands: Unique habitats of the southeastern United States.
Wetlands 23:550-562.
To
request a reprint

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