[geeks] Mr Bill?
wa2egp at att.net
wa2egp at att.net
Thu Sep 18 16:09:26 CDT 2008
> We have the same issue in Tidewater.
>
> The greed factor is high along with stupidity, so they keep getting
> rid of those "nasty swamps" and replacing them with multiple smaller
> "managed wetlands".
>
> The old swamps used to absorb a lot of heavy wind and water.
>
> A guy at NASA made a simulation years ago about the effect of swamps
> as storm barriers, and it really does help, a lot. I was surprised
> how effective it was at reducing wind speed, slowing or halting storm
> surge, absorbing heavy rain, etc.
>
> The concrete and refuse barriers they build are nowhere near as good.
>
> A lot of our local swamps have been replaced with "managed wetlands",
> and they made most of them inland, frequently isolated from coastal
> water or streams.
>
> Not only does it make them less habitable by wildlife, it pretty much
> eliminates any benefit as a barrier since they are no longer along the
> coast.
>
> Unfortunately the environmental law is very cleverly written so that
> only the total acreage of swamp is accounted for.
>
> In other words, they can legally replace 1000 acres of swamp with 1000
> 1 acre managed wetlands which are basically just mosquito breeding
> grounds.
>
> They even count he "bowls" formed by interstate highway cloverleaf
> structures as wetland acreage now.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Shannon Hendrix
> shannon at widomaker.com
I teach Environmnetal Science and from all I've read it appears that 99% of the time when humans "improve" on nature, they usually just f__k it up.
Bob
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