Difference between revisions of "Wetlands: Gallery"
		
		
		
		
		
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| Jenny Hill (talk | contribs) m | Jenny Hill (talk | contribs)  m | ||
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| <gallery mode="packed" widths=200px heights=200px> | <gallery mode="packed" widths=200px heights=200px> | ||
| − | Emergent wetland vegetation.jpg|Emergent wetland vegetation supported by stormwater runoff at Kino Environmental Restoration Project. Photo by Matthew Grabau, US Fish and Wildlife Service | + | Emergent wetland vegetation.jpg|Emergent [[plants|wetland vegetation]] supported by stormwater runoff at Kino Environmental Restoration Project. Photo by Matthew Grabau, US Fish and Wildlife Service | 
| − | Constructed Wetland.jpg|Azalea Park, Charlottesville VA - "This side of the park, formerly located along a runoff channel that led into Moore's Creek, has been converted into a wetland which supports a surprising amount of insect and amphibian life." -Credit and Photo: Scott Clark (certhia on Flickr). | + | Constructed Wetland.jpg|Azalea Park, Charlottesville VA - "This side of the park, formerly located along a runoff channel that led into Moore's Creek, has been converted into a [[wetland]] which supports a surprising amount of insect and amphibian life." -Credit and Photo: Scott Clark (certhia on Flickr). | 
| Enjoying the marshes - geograph.org.uk - 1106348.jpg|Walberswick Mill sluice, part of the water level control and coastal defence infrastructure within the marshes, UK | Enjoying the marshes - geograph.org.uk - 1106348.jpg|Walberswick Mill sluice, part of the water level control and coastal defence infrastructure within the marshes, UK | ||
| </gallery> | </gallery> | ||
| [[Category:Gallery]] | [[Category:Gallery]] | ||
Revision as of 10:44, 11 October 2018
- Emergent wetland vegetation supported by stormwater runoff at Kino Environmental Restoration Project. Photo by Matthew Grabau, US Fish and Wildlife Service 
- Azalea Park, Charlottesville VA - "This side of the park, formerly located along a runoff channel that led into Moore's Creek, has been converted into a wetland which supports a surprising amount of insect and amphibian life." -Credit and Photo: Scott Clark (certhia on Flickr). 


