Seagrass-Watch Magazine Issue 47 - March 2013 | Page 28

T HERE IS GROWING CONCERN about the worldwide decline of seagrass meadows. The amplitude of the decline varies depending on the species, the area and the human pressure(1). In the Mediterranean Sea, loss of seagrass meadows is mainly due to coastal development, trawling (fishing with towed gear), pollution, anchoring, competition with invasive species and sea level rise(2). Trawling in the Mediterranean is probably the most severe and worrying current cause of loss of the seagrass Posidonia oceanica(3). In theory, trawling is prohibited between 0 and 50-100 metres depth and/or within the ca. 5,600 m coastal strip in almost all Mediterranean countries. However, this legislation is rarely enforced. slow growing: Posidonia oceanica is a large, long-living but very slow-growing seagrass. Its shoots, which are able to live for at least 30 years, are produced at a slow rate from rhizomes which grow horizontally by only 1-6 cm each year. Over centuries the rhizomes form mats which rise up into reefs that help to trap sediment and mediate the motion of waves, thus clarifying the water and protecting beaches from erosion. Posidonia oceanica is an important habitat forming species and provides habitat for many species, nursery grounds for the juveniles of many commercially important fishes and invertebrates. Posidonia oceanica is also grazed on by the Green Sea Turtle (Chelonia mydas). Source: Pergent, G., Semroud, R., Djellouli, A., Langar, H. & Duarte, C. 2010. Posidonia oceanica. In: IUCN 2012. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2012.2. www.iucnredlist.org. 28 WWW.SEAGRASSWA TCH.ORG