Poetry praising wetland park

1. In Ergon, there is Genhe Wetland, which is called the largest wetland in Asia. The winding and elegant river in the wetland is called the root river.

Today, we meet the beautiful Xixi Wetland. After waiting for a long time, the mysterious veil of Xixi Wetland was finally unveiled, and it appeared before our eyes like My Fair Lady.

Walking into the gate of the wetland, we came to the "green embankment" stretching for ten miles. On the green bank, every leaf and every clump of green grass is brightly illuminated by the sun, showing great vitality.

Autumn wind blows gently, and we come to the picturesque Xixi National Wetland Park. My friends and I are like happy birds thrown into the embrace of nature, cheering while running.

When we arrived at Xixi Wetland, the sky became bluer. The clear sky is as blue as the sea, and many white clouds float slowly like canoes.

6. Wetlands are an inseparable environmental resource for our human existence. Wetlands are like human kidneys, which can remove harmful gases from the city for us. Only healthy wetlands can have healthy people.

7. During my visit, I learned that wetland is an ecosystem with many unique functions on the earth. It not only provides a large number of food, raw materials and water resources for human beings, but also plays an important role in maintaining ecological balance, biodiversity and rare species resources, conserving water, storing flood and preventing drought, degrading pollution, regulating climate, replenishing groundwater and controlling soil erosion.

8. Wetlands are widely distributed all over the world and are rich in wildlife resources. They are important ecosystems. The breeding and migration of many rare waterfowl are inseparable from wetlands, so wetlands are called "birds' paradise".

9. Wetland is a multifunctional and biodiversity-rich ecosystem on the earth and one of the most important living environments for human beings.

10. In recent hundreds of years, wetlands have been seriously damaged. Although the drying up of wetlands is the inevitable result of natural processes, the rapid disappearance of many wetlands is closely related to unreasonable economic activities of human beings.