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Defenders of Wildlife

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Defenders of Wildlife

Mission Defenders of Wildlife is a national, nonprofit membership organization dedicated to the protection of all native animals and plants in their natural communities.

Website: http://www.defenders.org
Members: 4
Latest Activity: Sep 21

About Us

Founded in 1947, Defenders of Wildlife is one of the country’s leaders in science-based, results-oriented wildlife conservation. We stand out in our commitment to saving imperiled wildlife and championing the Endangered Species Act, the landmark law that protects them.

Mission

Defenders of Wildlife is a national, nonprofit membership organization dedicated to the protection of all native animals and plants in their natural communities.
Goals

We work to protect and restore America’s native wildlife, safeguard habitat, resolve conflicts, work across international borders and educate and mobilize the public.
From the President

“Our nation’s wildlife and wild places are precious gifts that enrich our planet and sustain us. But nearly everywhere, natural habitats—home to all kinds of creatures—are being destroyed to make way for new shopping malls, roads and housing developments. Meanwhile, in the halls of Congress, some politicians are eager to open public lands to oil drilling. Others are pressing to unravel the Endangered Species Act, our country’s pre-eminent wildlife conservation law. And beyond our borders, millions of animals are being exploited or killed illegally each year—becoming pets, food or souvenirs. With so many threats, concerned citizens are coming to the defense of America’s wildlife, and Defenders of Wildlife is proud to be a leader in the fight to preserve our nation’s animals and plants for generations to come.”



Rodger Schlickeisen, President
Funding

People who care about wildlife generously offer their support to Defenders of Wildlife. Defenders of Wildlife raised more than $35 million in fiscal year 2007, an increase of nearly $3 million from the previous year. This is a result of continued generous support from a number of sources—including a 13 percent increase in grants and contributions. In addition, law firms, media outlets and others freely donated their time to help Defenders protect native wildlife and habitats. Whether in the field, the courts or on Capitol Hill, these increased financial resources allowed Defenders to expand its programs and public education.

Discussion Forum

Kelyla na Fili

Cheetah

Started by Kelyla na Fili Sep. 10, 2008.

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Channel Island Fox

Started by Kelyla na Fili Sep. 10, 2008.

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Cerulean Warbler

Started by Kelyla na Fili Aug. 22, 2008.

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Kelyla na Fili Comment by Kelyla na Fili on December 13, 2008 at 6:56am
Wetlands Habitat

Wetlands are the link between land and water and are some of the most productive ecosystems in the world. Some common names for different types of wetlands are swamp, marsh and bog. Depending on the type of wetland it may be filled mostly with trees, grasses, shrubs or moss. To be called a wetland, an area must be filled or soaked with water at least part of the year. Some wetlands are actually dry at certain times of the year!

Wetlands have many important functions that benefit people and wildlife.

* Provide habitat for a wide variety and number of wildlife and plants
* Filter, clean and store water, and act like kidneys for other ecosystems
* Collect and hold flood waters
* Absorb wind and tidal forces
* Provide places of beauty and many recreational activities

Other names for wetlands include: muskeg, moor, fen, carr, dambo, mangal, vlei, bayou, slough, pocosin, prairie pothole and vernal pools. Each type of wetland has characteristics specific to their part of the world.
Wildlife

Wetlands provide extremely important habitat for a wide variety of wildlife – mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish and invertebrates like crabs, crayfish, dragonflies and yes, mosquitoes. Some animals live their whole lives in wetlands and others depend on wetlands for essential parts of their life cycle such as breeding sites. Wetlands provide:

* An extensive and complex food chain used by animals from alligators to zebra butterflies, salamanders, snakes, snapping turtles, marsh hawks and mink.
* Nesting sites and rookeries (places where birds that live in colonies nest together) for: red-winged blackbird, marsh wren, wood duck, herons, egrets, pelicans
* Spawning and nursery habitat for fish such as: striped bass, mangrove snapper, flounder, sea trout.
* Resting stopover sites for migratory birds, including: Canada goose, peregrine falcon, whooping crane, indigo bunting.
* Shelter and hiding places from predators like marsh hawks and raccoons for prey animals like rabbits and frogs
* Homes and travelways for: beaver, otter, bear, bobcat, muskrat.
* Clean drinking water for all wildlife and people

Wetlands also act like sponges by holding flood waters and keeping rivers at normal levels. Wetlands filter and purify water as it flows through the wetland system. Plants found in wetlands help control water erosion.
Types of Wetlands
Marshes

Marshes are areas with shallow water that are mostly grasslands. Marshes can be freshwater or saltwater and the amount of water in a marsh can change with the seasons and in the case of salt water marshes, can also change with the tide.

Plants
Freshwater marshes have soft stemmed and herbaceous plants, like grasses, shrubs and wildflowers. Plants found in saltwater marshes include reeds, grasses and shrubs like rushes, sedges, and saltbush.

Animals
Marshes are home to a variety of animals, including beavers, alligators, newts, shrimp and turtles.

Soil
Marshes have soil with low mineral content.

Location
Freshwater marshes often occur along the edges of lakes and rivers. Saltwater marshes occur along coastlines, inlets and estuaries where they are affected by tides, and often have a source of fresh water from surrounding land, rivers or ground water.
Swamps

Swamps are slow moving streams, rivers or isolated low areas with more open and deeper water than marshes.
Plants
Swamps have trees (for example, cypress tress in freshwater and mangrove trees in salty water) and woody shrubs rather than grasses and herbs. [Papyrus can be the main plant in African swamps.]

Location
Swamps are found in low-lying areas near rivers or coastal areas. Examples include the Everglades in Florida.

Soil
Swamp soil is poorly-drained and water logged.

Animals
Swamp wildlife includes alligators, snakes, a variety of insects, bobcat, beaver, large diversity of birds and river otter.
Bog

A bog is a fresh water wetland, usually formed in an old glacial lake with a spongy peat base. Most of the bog’s water comes from rain. A fen is a fresh water peat wetland covered mostly by grasses sedges, reeds, and wildflowers of high pH (alkaline) ground water.

Soil
Bogs have soil that is low in nutrients.

Plants
Evergreen trees and shrubs, and a floor covered by a thick carpet of sphagnum moss. Some species of carnivorous plants are also found in bogs.

Animals
There are only a few animals that are found in bogs. These include, red deer, Dragonflies and birds such as grouse and plover.
Threats

The United States has lost over half of the wetlands in the lower 48 states and the losses continue at an estimate of over 60,000 acres per year.

The life supporting importance of wetlands was largely unrecognized in the past. People drained, dredged, dammed and channeled wetlands, eliminated or converted them into dry land or filled them for lakes and water retention areas -- changing wetlands into cropland, pasture and subdivisions, mining the underlying resources, ridding insect life, filling in for road beds or flooding them for open water lakes, and using them for dumping grounds for waste and sewage.
Legal Status/Protection

In the United States some wetlands are regulated under the Clean Water Act and the Rivers and Harbors Act. Some states and counties also have wetland protections. Internationally, the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands of International Importance recognizes significant wetlands and works to conserve them.

There are several ways people try to protect wetlands today including, most importantly, preserving existing wetlands, and also other actions, such as, attempting to substitute newly created wetlands for areas that are destroyed.
For additional information

eNature

Bobcat Ecology

Find out what protections exist for the wetlands in your area

* Contact the US Environmental Protection Agency
* contact your state or local department of natural resources.
Kelyla na Fili Comment by Kelyla na Fili on September 11, 2008 at 10:06am
Why should not support McCain and Palin...




Kelyla na Fili Comment by Kelyla na Fili on August 22, 2008 at 7:42am
Photobucket



Dear Kelyla,

This is it. There are just 4 days until Alaskans head to the polls to vote on the state’s brutal aerial hunting program -- a program that has claimed the lives of nearly 800 wolves.
In advance of Tuesday’s vote, Safari Club International and pro-aerial hunting politicians are working overtime to deceive voters and distort the terrible truth about aerial hunting. Even the state of Alaska is spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on state-funded “educational materials” get people to vote their way.
We need your help to counter the lies and stop the killing. Please donate now to help run a powerful television new ad through Election Day (August 26th).
We are so close to victory, Kelyla. Recent polling shows that most Alaskans who are likely to vote support the ballot measure to stop needless aerial hunting of wolves, bears and wolverines in Alaska.
But a lot can happen between now and Tuesday’s vote.
Those in favor of aerial hunting have deep pockets and they use dirty tricks.
The Alaska Board of Game just sent a pamphlet touting aerial hunting of wolves… using public money! We need to raise at least $75,000 to help Alaskans for Wildlife match the opposition's advertising and mobilization efforts in the final hours of this important campaign. This will be a close vote, and we need to help get out the word and get anti-aerial hunting voters to the polls on Tuesday.
Donate today to run this ad through Election Day and support our efforts to save wolves and other wildlife.
With the support of caring people like you, our allies at Alaskans for Wildlife have already reached more than 125,000 Alaskans through the mail. Now they need our help to keep this powerful television ad on the air and counter the distortions from the other side.
The aerial hunting vote will largely be determined by what happens in the next 4 days. We’re counting on your support.
Sincerely,


Rodger Schlickeisen
President
Defenders of Wildlife Action Fund

P.S. If you haven’t donated recently, now is the time to make a difference. Together, we can stop wolves from being needlessly gunned down from the air. Make a secure donation online now or call 1-800-425-4632 to make a contribution by phone.
 

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Kelyla na Fili Tammie Lady Shaman Stephanie Marques
 
 

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