I have NO idea, but wetlands have a lot of trees, I think. Trees help the air.
Sorry, I'm studying wetlands right now, so I have no idea
Water can be filtered down to the aquifer, which feeds the source of our wells. Many communities are using wetlands to do this. See related links. Answer nature can't clean its water scientist can clean it better and that is how our water is filtered
Air (clean or dirty) is a mixture, as it contains several different gases.
That clean air absorbs little or no light.
yes there is threats to the wetlands
No gasses is what pollutes the air
it should be wetlands since we want as many wetlands as we can since wetlands are such an important part to watersheds everywhere they clean the water are a watering place for animals prevent floods clean the extra nutrients out of the water helping a lot to prevent algae bloom
yes
Usually No. The tide is what usually cleans wetlands. Heavy rains usually cause extra run off of chemicals from farmland that pollutes wetlands.
wetlands
Wetlands can be protected by passing laws and promoting programs that help protect existing wetlands. In Michigan, under the Wetlands Protection Act, people are not allowed to drain, fill, or build on a wetland unless they receive a permit.
pollution will go up if they disapear ozone layer will go down if wetlands disapear many smoggy days
WHAT FACTORS CONTRIBUTE TO THE LOSS OF WETLANDS? We humans pollute the air thus taking away habitats and life!
water, temperature, air, soil, and sunlight
There are several. Water, mud, and air are some examples.
Without clean air we couldn't breathe
This is because wetlands have organisms in them that act as filters and clean the water. So it conserves water by cleansing it for us and then making it able for us to drink. I think that would be considered conserving.
The Clean Water Act and the Clean Air Act were created to help clean up the air and water from pollution. The Clean Air Act was passed in 1970 and the Clean Water Act followed in 1972.