The type of wetland most likely found in warm, forested areas is swamps.

Why swamps are the best match

  • Swamps are wetlands dominated by trees and shrubs , so they are literally forested wetlands.
  • Many swamps occur in humid, warm climates , including subtropical and tropical regions with abundant forest cover.
  • Examples include cypress–tupelo swamp forests and other bottomland or coastal swamp forests in warm coastal plains.

Why the other options don’t fit as well

  • Bogs
    • Typically form in cooler climates (often boreal or temperate), with acidic, nutrient‑poor peat and usually not the classic warm, tall-forested setting.
  • Salt marshes
    • Occur along coasts and are dominated by grasses and herbaceous plants, not trees; they are more open and not “forested”.
  • Inland marshes
    • Freshwater marshes are dominated by soft‑stemmed plants like reeds and sedges, usually open and grassy rather than wooded.

So, among the choices bogs, swamps, salt marshes, inland marshes , the correct answer is swamps.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.