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Wetlands of South Carolina

Carolina Bay Wetlands
Carolina
Bays are ovate shaped shallow depressions and occur abundantly
across a broad band of the coastal plain from southern North
Carolina to the South Carolina-Georgia border. They represent a type
of bog or bog-lake complex unique to the southeastern coastal plain,
and are thought to have been formed by a meteor or comet impact.
"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...Most Carolina bays are not naturally connected with
stream drainages or other water bodies, and their hydrology is
driven primarily by rainfall and evapotranspiration....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...If these wetlands are not
protected in the future, a major source of biological diversity in
the southeastern United States will be lost."
--Excerpt from Carolina Bay
Wetlands: Unique Habitats of the Southeastern United
States by Rebecca R. Sharitz, Keynote Speaker
Southeastern Coastal
Marshes
Coastal
salt marshes all exist in a balance between the buildup of sediment
for their roots and the level of the sea that washes over them with
tides. South
Carolina has an estimated 400,000 acres of coastal marshes and
100,000 acres of tidal swamps. Charleston County with 439.72 acres
of water vs. 917.42 acres of land) has one of the greatest share of
salt marshes in the state. Tthe Santee, Stono, Ashley and Cooper
Rivers feed brackish marshes upstream. There are also many
tidal fresh marshes and swamps along the drainage basins of Combahee,
Savannah, Edisto, Pee Dee, Waccamaw, Santee, Cooper and Ashepoo
Rivers. Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge, Edisto Beach State
Park, Huntington Island State Park, and Charleston’s Folly Beach
County Park have all preserved areas of coastal marshland.
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