Gallery 0 Resultados Reset All Close Agusan del Sur - man in a boat Julie Rose Apdohan Bhomra beel - Men fishing on a boat Jeevan Gowda Bukit Batok Urban wetland in Singapore Thu Ya Win Snails in Chennai Santhosh Gopal Chitwan National Park Prachan Bhujel Fujairah - frog Anne Bourbon Inle Lake, Burma - Myanmar Aungko Win Jaflong, Sylhet Zahid Sunny Dragonfly - Jahra Reserve Abdullah Al-Zaidan Kochi - Fisheries Anwesha Behera Kujukuri beach, Chiba Prefecture Toshimitsu Nuka Kushiro Shitsugen National Park in Hokkaido Taro Yamamoto Flamingos in Nerul Navi Mumbai Minakshi Kurhe Panje, Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra, India Sarang Naik Flamingos in Panje, Uran Aishwarya Sridhar Pulicat Lake, Andhra Pradesh, India Ravishankar PM Punggol in Singapore Noel Bayong South Borneo, Barito River, Barito Kuala Abie a ghani Unique wetlands in Kolkata, West Bengal India maintained by farmers and fisher folk. Avijit Ghosh Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve in Singapore Jimmy Wong A mixed flock of bar tailed Godwits and Grey plovers, coastal sand flats of Mersing Shores, Johor in Singapore. David Tan The Olo-Olo Mangrove Forest and Eco park , Labo Batangas, Philippines Froilan Robas Chilika Lake, Orissa, India - Fishing in a boat Yus Rusila Noor Al Fattah Damselflies (Rhinocypha humeralis) play an important ecological role as they are one of the most visible indicators of the ecosystem health and biophysical conditions of wetland areas in which they breed. They are also helpful to potential human health risks by consuming mosquitoes and their larvae. They also eat other small invertebrates which make them valuable in controlling harmful insect populations. Loss of damselflies could have a ripple effect on food webs. Erickson Tabayag Much of the world’s food, essential for human health and well-being, comes from wetland ecosystems. Rice, grown in wetland paddies, is the staple diet of 3.5 billion people. Michael Abhiseka Wasesajati Hitoshi Watanabe Hawizeh Marsh Ramsar Site, a transboundary wetland, part of the Mesopotamian marshlands complex centered at the confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, the marshes are ca.75-80% located in Iraq with the remaining area extending into the Islamic Republic of Iran. Ramsar Convention