Wet. Wet. Oh and Wet.
Wetlands are defined as swamps or other areas where the water table is near to or above the land surface. They may occur at any altitude, from sea level, right up to flat lands high in the mountains. Thus the climate is whatever the surrounding area has. Likewise the vegetation will be that appropriate to the climate and altitude.
Hot and humid according to the location.
One service that estuaries and wetlands provide is a home for animals and plants.
it is physically possible for humans to live in the wetlands, although, because of the moist environment, many humans choose not to. there are many alligators and swamp-animals which are not friendly toward humans, so you wont find humans living there.
Wetlands are specifically valuable to people as places for recreational and educational activities such as hunting, fishing, camping, and wildlife observation. Wetlands are often filled in to be used by humans for everything from agriculture to parking lots, in part because the economic value of wetlands has only been recognized recently: the shrimp and fish that breed in salt water marshes are generally harvested in deeper water, for example. Humans can maximize the area of healthy, functioning wetlands by minimizing their impacts and by developing management strategies that protect, and where possible rehabilitate those ecosystems at risk. Wetlands are sometimes deliberately created to help with water reclamation. One example is Green Cay Wetlands in Boynton Beach, Florida, in the United States. While the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that human activities are responsible for about 60 percent of methane emissions worldwide, wetlands are among the natural sources. A study by Ohio State University scientists suggests that river floods and storms that send water surging through swamps and marshes near rivers and coastal areas might cut in half the average greenhouse gas emissions from those affected wetlands.
yeppers
Usually wet.
wetlands and forests
wetlands, bogs, rainforest(sometimes)
Yes. Wetlands do not have a unique climate and can be found in a variety of climates, many of which can get both hail and sleet.
wet,warm,and humid.ps.another word for humid is moist
Caring for Wetland - An Answer To Climate Change
Yes. A biome is any area with a distinct climate and geography.
The weather in a wetlands is determined by geography and climate. Only larger wetlands have an effect on their environment. As water evaporates from the wetlands, it can create humidity and more frequent rain.
Wetlands are defined as swamps or other areas where the water table is near to or above the land surface. They may occur at any altitude, from sea level, right up to flat lands high in the mountains. Thus the climate is whatever the surrounding area has. Likewise the vegetation will be that appropriate to the climate and altitude.
This question can not be answered because wet lands occur in many climatic zones in the world.
Ponds are typically found in wetlands and forests. This is because the climate is not too hot to dry them up.