The significance of small water bodies in shaping the landscape is highly complex and multidirectional. On the one hand they enhance the landscape,species,and habitat diversity. At a regional level, they contribute highly to freshwater diversity, with recent evidence showing that they often support considerably more species,both unique and rare, than other water-ecosystem types [3-7]. On the other hand, they retain the water in an uncontrolled way. Currently, the problem of increasing potential capacity retention is quite serious in the light of chaotic catchment and river valley management, as well as increasing population density. What’s more, the presence of any hydrogenic ecosystems helps to improve the ecological status of forest and wetland habitat [8].