| Valuable Seagrasses Face Global Warming Threat
SWITZERLAND: July 28, 2008
GENEVA - Seagrass meadows, which are vital for the survival of much marine
life and a source of household materials in Europe and Africa, face a
mounting threat from global warming, a report said on Friday.
The report, from the Swiss-based International Union for the Conservation of
Nature (IUCN), said the submerged meadows -- many around the Mediterranean
-- could be saved through concerted action by governments and scientists.
"Seagrass habitats are already declining due to increasing water
temperatures, algae (seaweed) growth and light reduction, which are all
effects of global change," said IUCN specialist Mats Bjork, one of the
authors of the report.
The report said the grass -- flowering plants found in shallow waters around
the globe -- provides food and shelter for prawn and fish populations and is
used traditionally as mattress filling, roof covering and for medicines.
If much of it were to disappear, a wide range of species -- including
dugongs, sea turtles, sea urchins and seabirds who feed on it -- would also
come under increased threat, according to the report.
The report said some of the healthiest seagrass areas known to exist today
were off the North African coast of Libya and Tunisia in areas where there
had been little industrial or tourism development.
Carl Gustaf Lundin, head of IUCN's Global Marine Programme, said the meadows
could be saved by making seagrass more resilient to climbing temperatures
through mixing genetically more diverse populations.
The report, issued at a conference in Barcelona, said the introduction of
protected areas and linking the underwater meadows to nearby mangrove
plantations or coral reefs would also give a huge boost to their chances of
survival.
Lundin said it was also vital to extend research into how seagrass can be
protected -- a effort already promoted by IUCN that would require
governments and scientific institutions to devote resources and time.
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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