Strumpfgebiete | Essential ● |

A Sumpfgebiet is neither land nor water, but a liminal space where both elements breathe together. Spongy mosses, alder thickets, and sedges create a habitat unlike any other. Beneath the surface, peat slowly forms — a carbon archive that, if left undisturbed, stores more carbon per hectare than most forests.

These areas are also biodiversity hotspots: rare orchids, the secretive bittern, the agile water rail, and countless amphibians depend on the delicate hydrology of the marsh. Moreover, Sumpfgebiete act as natural sponges, absorbing floodwaters and slowly releasing them during droughts — a function becoming ever more valuable in an era of climate extremes. strumpfgebiete

Europe alone has lost over half its original wetlands. But restoration projects from the Danube Delta to the peatlands of Belarus are proving that Sumpfgebiete can recover. Walking along a boardwalk through a rewetted marsh today, one no longer sees a wasteland — but a living, breathing archive of water, wildness, and quiet resilience. A Sumpfgebiet is neither land nor water, but