Wednesday, 11 March 2020

Wildlife

Britain to Restore Sea Meadows

Seagrass meadows were once common around the UK coast, but more than 90% have been lost as a result of algae-boosting pollution, anchor damage and port and marina building. The meadows, however, store carbon 35 times faster than tropical rainforests and harbour up to 40 times more marine life than seabeds without grass, facts that are driving the effort to bring them back.

The Seagrass Ocean Rescue project will ultimately place 20km of rope and a million seeds on the shallow seafloor in Dale Bay, Wales, where they will sprout through the growbags and restore the habitat. Plans are in place to expand the project around Britain.

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