Why is the Conservation and Restoration of U.S. Watersheds Important?

June 24, 2018

The natural features that are present in our watersheds provide services for us all. We know that clean water is important to us; in fact humans can’t live without it! What you may not be aware of are the other functions that a healthy watershed supply for us.

Wetlands filter runoff water from cities and fields and remove sediment. Natural stream banks slow down water as it races downstream during high water helping to control flash flooding. And natural, un-compacted soils absorb water slowly after it rains helping to control erosion and flooding, and helping to filter the water before it reaches ponds, lakes, and rivers.

A healthy watershed provides all these services to us for free, but when we disturb the natural systems that are at work for us, we have to pay to have the same services performed. Instead of the healthy un-compacted soils absorbing and filtering water to help clean it, we must pay more for water treatment. Instead of natural vegetated streambanks slowing down rushing, raging, high waters, we pay the costs of flash flood damage. Instead of wetlands absorbing sediment and runoff from cities and fields those sediments end up choking streams and lakes resulting in maintenance costs.

Protecting and restoring a healthy well-functioning watershed saves us all money in the long run. We aren’t the only ones who count on healthy watersheds either – plants, birds, fish, and others depend on healthy watersheds for life.

Contact Trout Headwaters to Learn More:

THi Project Samples

Whitewood Farm

EcoBlu Analyst

Montebello

Waders in the Water

Tye River

Chesapeake Shore

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