Browsers that can not handle javascript will not be able to access some features of this site.
Skip Navigation
DNR BannerMichigan.gov, Official Website for Michigan
Michigan.gov Home DNR Home | Links | Site Map | Contact DNR | Ask DNR
Printer Friendly Version Printer Friendly   Text Only Version Text Version Email this page Email Page
Wetland Types

Vernal Pond

Vernal ponds are small bodies of standing water that form in the spring from meltwater and are often dry by mid-summer or may even be dry before the end of the spring growing season. Many vernal ponds occur in depressions in agricultural areas, but may also be found in woodlots. Wetland vegetation may become established but are usually dominated by annuals.

Vernal Pond

Wet Meadow

Wet meadows usually look much like a fallow field except that they are dominated by water-loving grasses and sedges. They will contain nearly 100% vegetative cover with very little or no open water. Any surface water present is temporary or seasonal and only during the growing season in the spring. Wet meadows often form a transition zone between aquatic communities and uplands with soils that are often saturated and mucky.

Wet Meadow


Bog or Fen

Bogs are found on saturated, acid peat soils that are low in nutrients. They support low shrubs, herbs and a few tree species on a mat of sphagnum moss. Some bogs are totally overgrown and some consist of open water surrounded by floating vegetation. Acid-tolerant plants found in and around bogs include woody plants such as labrador tea, poison sumac, tamarack, and black spruce. Many species of orchids prefer bog habitats, as do insect-eating sundews and pitcher plants. Bogs are usually only found in the northern part of Michigan.

Fens are similar to bogs except that the soils are more alkaline because they result from water passing through calcareous deposits. Fens have a higher plant diversity than bogs due to higher nutrient levels. Fens can be found in the southern part of Michigan.

Bog or Fen


Marsh

Marshes have standing water from less than an inch up to 3 feet deep. The amount of water can fluctuate seasonally or from year to year. They are dominated by soft-stemmed emergent plants such as cattails and rushes. Vegetative cover is usually around 50%. In Michigan, marshes can be found at the edge of some rivers and lakes, in lowlands and depressions, and in swales between sand dunes.

Marsh


Wooded Swamp

Wooded swamps are aptly named because they are dominated by woody plants such as shrubs and/or trees. The soil is saturated throughout the growing season. Some may become dry during the summer months. In Michigan, trees and shrubs found in wooded swamps include red and silver maple, cedar, balsam, willow, alder, black ash, elm and dogwood. They often occur along streams or on floodplains, in flat uplands or shallow lake basins.

Wooded Swamp


Pond

Ponds are open bodies of water that are less than 20 acres in size and that do not dry up during summer months. There is little emergent vegetation but some floating vegetation may occur around the edges.

Pond

Link to Department and Agencies Web Site Index
Link to Statewide Online Services Index
Link to Statewide Web-based Surveys
Link to RSS feeds available on this site
Related Content
 •  Volunteer Listserv
 •  Survey Instructions PDF icon
 •  Survey Route Description Form PDF icon
 •  Survey Updates

Michigan.gov Home | DNR Home | Report All Poaching 1-800-292-7800 | Feedback | Contact DNR | Ask DNR | State Web Sites
Privacy Policy | Link Policy | Accessibility Policy | Security Policy | Michigan News | Michigan.gov Survey

Copyright © 2001-2007 State of Michigan