Science

Special buoys mark sensitive seagrass habitats

BBC Science June 23, 2026 4 views
Special buoys mark sensitive seagrass habitats

Advertisement

Special buoys mark sensitive seagrass habitats

Ocean Conservation Trust/PA Wire The long snouted seahorse is a rare seahorse whose numbers declined the destruction of seagrass habitat.
It is a small dark black coloured seahorse with light brown spines and is on white sand beside green grass.
Looe Harbour Commissioners and the Ocean Conservation Trust have joined forces to protect one of the largest seagrass meadows in the South West.
The buoys mark a voluntary no-anchor zone, to encourage water users to avoid anchoring, reduce seabed damage, and protect declining seagrass habitats.
They have also fitted three Advanced Mooring Systems (AMS) - designed as a low-impact alternative to traditional anchoring, which suspend chains above the seabed using mid-water floats to prevent disturbing sensitive habitats.

Ocean Conservation Trust A yellow buoy on the sea has a white label with black and green ticks and the words blue meadows and seagrass habitat.
It is part of the Ocean Conservation Trust's Blue Meadows programme across the south coast to protect seagrass ecosystems.
It is estimated about 40% of the UK's seagrass has been lost since the 1940s. Pollution, and disturbance from anchoring, bottom trawling and dredging and coastal development have all contributed to its decline, the trust said.
Looe Harbour Commissioner Dave Bond said protecting the seagrass was "essential to the long-term health of our marine environment."

<small>Source: BBC Science</small>

How did this make you feel?

Advertisement

Category
Science

Advertisement

🌙