Language:  GlossaryImagesHelp
 
Home: USES: Human Settlements on the Coast: Types of Habitats at Risk: Seagrass
Advanced Search | an expanded view of Topics and Knowledge in the Atlas
 Login for Members

 Username
 
 Password
 

Forgotten your Password?

Not a Member? Join Now

 
Navigate the Atlas:
 3 SUB-TOPICS:
 Topic Overview
 Editors
 KO Overview
 Owner
 
Seagrass
Text-only     Printer-friendly version             
Seagrasses are commonly found in shallow coastal marine locations. They are the only known flowering marine submerged grass. With nearly 60 species they form a diverse group and are found world-wide. They support complex food webs through both a physical and primary production role. Juveniles of many commercially important species of fish and invertebrates inhabit seagrass beds as a nursery area, others permanently over their entire lifecycle.
 









Florida seagrass bed. Taken by P. Gill, FKNMS, courtesy of NOAA.




"Over the last decade 290,000ha of seagrass loss have been documented. Projecting the rate to undocumented parts of the world, over 1.2million ha of seagrass have likely been lost." Short, F.T., & Wyllie-Echeverria, S. 2000.
 
The greatest threats to the world's seagrasses are humans. Urban pollution, agricultural runoff, industrial waste, terrestrial erosion, coastal development and dredging all contribute to their global decrease. Declining water quality is definitely their major threat, nutrient loading and sedimentation in particular. In the United States over 50 percent of the historical seagrass cover has been lost from Tampa Bay, 76 percent from the Mississippi Sound, and 90 percent from Galveston Bay.   See More...
 
 
 
 
All  (5) News   (2) Documents   (3)
  
Global Warming’s Impact May Be Detected in Genes, Suggests Study of How Seagrasses React to Heat Waves
by Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences (IFM-GEOMAR), ScienceDaily
16 November 2011

Researchers believe that climate change plays an important role as the increase in extreme events such as heat waves is a major challenge for the seagrass.
Read more at http://www.sciencedaily. ... 62148.htm.
Other News
979 Topics - 5229 Related Knowledge - 11257 Members - 47 Editors
freeMem:135,726,456 totMem:477,233,152 reqNum:1068945 openSessions:0 generationTime:2013/05/19 16:09:12