
THESE researchers from the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Germany, are on a mission to rescue a crucial marine ecosystem that is being lost to climate change: seagrass meadows. Seagrass helps the ocean store carbon dioxide and is a key source of food and shelter for marine life, but a third of European seagrass has vanished since the 19th century.
The idea behind SeaStore 鈥 the joint seagrass restoration project involving GEOMAR 鈥 is to breed a version that is more resistant to rising sea temperatures, in the hope this will help the meadows flourish again. Flowering seagrass is collected from the Baltic Sea off northern Germany and cultivated in the lab until the seeds are ready to be harvested and planted.

So far, it has been 鈥渧ery successful鈥 the plants are healthy and growing well鈥, says GEOMAR researcher , shown in the main image collecting seagrass. Another researcher can be seen snorkelling in the second image, while the image below that is of Stevenson at a citizen diving course, where locals are being recruited and trained to help with the project.
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The images below show: PhD student Isabella Provera at the lab, tubes of samples to analyse the meadows鈥 development, a student preparing seagrass for analysis and GEOMAR researcher studying samples.

骋贰翱惭础搁鈥檚 says that, despite the hype, to ensure SeaStore isn鈥檛 a 鈥渂ig missed opportunity鈥, more funding is needed to ensure the project succeeds and to get more citizens involved in ocean science.
