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MUDFLAT

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Mudflats near Oban on Stewart Island, New Zealand.

Mudflats in Brewster, Massachusetts, USA, extending hundreds of yards offshore at the low tide. The line of seashells in the foreground indicates the high water mark.

'Mudflats' are coastal wetlands that form when mud is deposited by the tides or rivers, sea and oceans. They are found in sheltered areas such as bays, bayous, lagoons, and estuaries. Mudflats may be viewed geologically as exposed layers of bay mud, resulting from deposition of estuarine silts, clays and marine animal detritus.
Mudflats are typically important regions for wildlife, supporting a large population, although levels of biodiversity are not particularly high. They are often of particular importance to migratory birds. In the United Kingdom mudflats have been classifed as a Biodiversity Action Plan priority habitat.
The maintenance of mudflats is important in preventing coastal erosion. However, mudflats worldwide are under threat from predicted sea level rises, land claims for development, dredging due to shipping purposes, and chemical pollution.

Contents
Major world mudflats
Trivia
See also

Major world mudflats



Wadden Sea: Netherlands, Germany, Denmark

Bridgwater Bay & Morecambe Bay: United Kingdom

Chongming Dongtan Nature Reserve, Shanghai, China

Banc d'Arguin, Mauritania

Lindisfarne Island, England

San Francisco Bay, United States

Cape Cod Bay, United States

Minas Basin, Nova Scotia, Canada

Yellow Sea, Korea

Trivia


Humphrey the whale, who may have been the most famous cetacean in history, was rescued from a beached condition on a mudflat, immediately north of the Dakin building at Sierra Point in San Francisco Bay.

See also



Wetland

Coastal wetland

Intertidal zone

Estuary

Humphrey the whale

Bay mud

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