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Dedicated to protecting the working lands, native habitats and rural beauty of the Hilltowns since 1986

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You are here: Home / Announcements / Why Protect Wetlands?

Why Protect Wetlands?

November 8, 2021

by Paul Wetzel

This year brought record-breaking rainfall to Massachusetts, with flooding that destroyed crops and damaged roads. Climate change will bring more-frequent extreme weather events like these. Fortunately, conserved wetlands helped reduce the flooding that occurs during heavy rains. In this article, HLT Board member Paul Wetzel examines the many benefits that wetlands provide to both humans and to the whole ecosystem.


In exploring landscapes in The Hilltowns and beyond, one can always find low areas where water accumulates. Wetlands form in the transition zones between land and shallow water less than two meters deep. Since water collects in many places, wetlands take different forms: muddy mountain meadows, low freshwater marshes, and the banks of valley streams to name a few. As the land flattens out near the sea, wetlands can be found in the deep-water swamps along larger rivers and fresh or saltwater marshes shaped by tides along the coast.  

Despite their name, wetlands are not always wet. In fact, a fluctuating water level is one of the key characteristics of a wetland and all wetland plants and animals are adapted quite well to fluctuating water levels. Wetland water levels may vary seasonally or even daily—like in tidal marshes.

An adult and child squat at the edge of a vernal pool, looking into the water
Searching for egg masses in a Hilltown vernal pool

In Western Massachusetts, we have vernal pools—small forested wetlands usually without outlets—which are wet from the fall to the early summer but dry out during the hottest summer months. With this seasonal water fluctuation, vernal pools provide a place for woodland amphibians to lay eggs that metamorphose into adults. If vernal pools were wet all year they might support fish, one of the predators of amphibian eggs and tadpoles.

Wetlands provide many benefits or ecosystem services for people as well. The benefits provided often depend on where a wetland is located. For example, many marshes and riparian (river-adjacent) wetlands act like giant sponges across the landscape, storing water during large rain events. This storage capacity reduces the peak water flow levels in streams and rivers which in turn reduces flooding of towns and cities built along waterways.

Similarly, coastal marshes and mangrove-forested wetlands control coastal erosion during storm events. They provide this service without large capital investments in sea walls or levees and the costly maintenance that such projects require. However, this ecosystem service only works if the coastal marshes remain intact; they cannot be cut up by channels or roadways or filled for building lots.

Wetlands are dynamic ecosystems because they exist at the land/water interface.  In a small area there are plants and animals that live in the uplands surrounding the wetland, aquatic organisms that live in the water, and plants and animals living at the edges of the wetland that must be adapted to fluctuating water levels over a day or season. In addition to the local species, many animals temporarily use wetlands as migratory stopover points or as breeding areas.

The extent of biological connections in time and space for a single wetland should not be underestimated. A marsh wetland in one of HLT’s conserved lands could be a resting place for songbirds migrating from South America or a breeding pool for frogs and salamanders living in the surrounding woods. Many insects will be attracted to the variety of habitats a wetland offers, in turn attracting other animals that feed on insects. For all these reasons wetlands are often biodiversity hotspots. This intersection of species provide aesthetic and recreational benefits for people, just one more service wetlands give us!

Wetlands are dynamic ecosystems that are found throughout the landscape. They provide a variety of benefits from water storage to recreational opportunities. The conserved lands of HLT contain many wetlands. Don’t pass them by–there is no place better to be!


Wetlands are a crucial part of a healthy landscape and a healthy planet. Together, we can fight against and mitigate the damage caused by climate change by combining a reduction in fossil fuel usage with nature-based solutions like conserving and restoring wetlands, grasslands, and forests.

A large wetland in The Hilltowns, seen through the silhouette of a few trees in the foreground. Behind the wetland in the distance are a line of trees, with blue sky above
Wetland in the Hilltowns

Filed Under: Announcements, Newsletter

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Edible Native and Invasive Plants with Russ Cohen
Edible Native and Invasive Plants with Russ Cohen
Apr 29th, 2018    
1:30 pm - 4:00 pm
  • Hands-On
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  • Partnership Event
  • Workshop
Learn how to identify, responsibly harvest, and prepare edible invasive plants in this partnership event with Hilltown Land Trust and Kestrel Land Trust, co-sponsored by [...]
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Spring Ephemeral Wildflower walk
Spring Ephemeral Wildflower walk
May 5th, 2018    
10:00 am - 12:00 pm
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Join us for a spring ephemeral walk! Led by former Hilltown Land Trust AmeriCorps service member Nicole Rhodes, we will check out the wildflowers on [...]
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The Wondrous World of Mushrooms
The Wondrous World of Mushrooms
May 19th, 2018    
12:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Meekins Library
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We are thrilled to be partnering with Williamsburg Libraries to offer The Wondrous World of Mushrooms: an introductory talk on mushroom identification and the life [...]
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Stevens Property Trail Workday
20 May
May 20th, 2018    
1:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Stevens Property
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Help Hilltown Land Trust improve visitor experience for it's popular "Stevens" conservation area in Huntington, MA. This stewardship workday will involve: trail blazing, boundary marking, [...]
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Hike at Chester-Blandford State Forest - Hilltowns Hiking Series
Hike at Chester-Blandford State Forest - Hilltowns Hiking Series
May 23rd, 2018    
10:00 am - 1:00 pm
Chester-Blandford State Forest
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Enjoy a hike in the Chester-Blandford State Forest, followed by lunch nearby at The River Cafe & Bakery (also known as Hunt & Hart Cafe and [...]
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Spring Hike at Stevens - Hilltowns Hiking Series
Spring Hike at Stevens - Hilltowns Hiking Series
May 26th, 2018    
10:00 am - 12:00 pm
Stevens Property
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Hilltown Land Trust and Western Mass Hilltown Hikers are partnering up to offer a guided hike on the Stevens property. 
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Events on Apr 29th, 2018
Edible Native and Invasive Plants with Russ Cohen
Edible Native and Invasive Plants with Russ Cohen
29 Apr 18
Events on May 5th, 2018
Spring Ephemeral Wildflower walk
Spring Ephemeral Wildflower walk
5 May 18
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The Wondrous World of Mushrooms
The Wondrous World of Mushrooms
19 May 18
Williamsburg
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20 May
Stevens Property Trail Workday
20 May 18
Huntington
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Hike at Chester-Blandford State Forest - Hilltowns Hiking Series
Hike at Chester-Blandford State Forest - Hilltowns Hiking Series
23 May 18
Chester
Events on May 26th, 2018
Spring Hike at Stevens - Hilltowns Hiking Series
Spring Hike at Stevens - Hilltowns Hiking Series
26 May 18
Huntington
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