Seagrasses are marine angiosperms (flowering plants) that resemble terrestrial grass in appearance.Seagrasses produce true flowers and seeds, possess strap-like or oval leaves, and develop root and rhizome systems that anchor them to the seabed.They are the only flowering plants which grow in marine environments.Seagrasses reproduce both sexually and asexually. In sexual reproduction, submarine pollination transfers male pollen to female flowers underwater. Asexually, they propagate through rhizomes-horizontal underground stems, that enable regeneration after disturbances like grazing or storms.
Seagrass habitats are declining globally—some estimates record a loss rate of up to 7% per year—due to pollution, coastal development, eutrophication, and destructive fishing practices such as bottom trawling.
- Pollution & Poor Water Quality
- Nutrient runoff (nitrogen, phosphorus) from agriculture and sewage causes eutrophication, leading to algal blooms and hypoxia (low oxygen) conditions harmful to seagrass survival .
- Industrial and plastic pollution also reduce water clarity and light penetration, impacting photosynthesis .
- Coastal Development & Sedimentation
- Dredging, land reclamation, coastal infrastructure, and aquaculture result in sediment deposition and burial of seagrass beds, suffocating plants even at burial depths.
- Physical Damage by Boats and Fishing
- Propeller scarring and bottom trawling physically uproot seagrass, creating barren zones from which recovery is difficult .
- Climate Change & Temperature Stress
- Rising temperatures, sea-level rise, and increased storm intensity stress seagrass species.
- Disease, Predation & Invasive Species
- Wasting disease, invasive crabs, or pests can erode habitat edges and reduce root stability, accelerating erosion and decline .
Seagrasses are unsung heroes of coastal ecosystems. By providing biodiversity support, climate resilience, coastal protection, and livelihood benefits, they play a crucial role in environmental sustainability.
FAQs on Seagrass
Q1. What exactly is a seagrass meadow?
Seagrass meadows are underwater ecosystems formed by flowering marine plants with root-rhizome systems anchoring them in shallow coastal sediments .
Q2. Why are seagrasses referred to as “lungs of the sea”?
Because they photosynthesize, producing oxygen and helping regulate carbon dioxide levels in coastal waters—playing a critical role in ocean health .
Q3. How do seagrasses support fisheries?
Seagrass beds act as nurseries for juvenile stages of many commercially important fish and shellfish, significantly contributing to fisheries productivity .
Q4. What is “blue carbon” and how do seagrasses contribute?
Blue carbon refers to carbon captured by coastal ecosystems. Seagrass meadows account for 10–18% of ocean carbon storage and sequester carbon much faster per unit area than terrestrial forests .
Q5. What threats are seagrass ecosystems facing?
Major threats include sedimentation, nutrient pollution, coastal infrastructure development, destructive trawling, and rising sea temperatures, all leading to habitat degradation and loss
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