1 sound
Walk from the beach into the sea and listen to David Brown, ecologist at the National Trust, tell you about what lives under the waves.
90 per cent of the UK’s seagrass meadows have been lost over the past century. As such, the 50 hectares that grow in Studland Bay are incredibly important. Seagrass meadows are home to diverse wildlife, and at Studland this is one of the few places in the UK where both our native seahorse species breed. They are also the nursery bed for many of our fish that come to spawn in the spring. Seagrass is incredibly effective at sequestering Carbon - a hectare of seagrass meadow captures and stores Carbon more effectively than a hectare of rainforest. This valuable habitat, for both for biodiversity and global climate change, is why Studland Bay was designated a Marine Conservation Zone in 2019. How can you help keep this special place safe?
Photo by Alex Mustard. Music and sound by Laura Reid 2021.
Love what we do? ➔ become our Open Collective backer
Privacy & cookie policy / Terms and conditions
© ECHOES. All rights reserved / ECHOES.XYZ Limited is a company registered in England and Wales, Registered office at Merston Common Cottage, Merston, Chichester, West Sussex, PO20 1BE
v2.5.15 © ECHOES. All rights reserved.