a single seagrass clone stretching 180 km in Western Australia's Shark Bay
- Written by Elizabeth Sinclair, Senior Research Fellow, The University of Western Australia
Rachel Austin, Author providedNext time you go diving or snorkelling, have a close look at those wondrously long, bright green ribbons, waving with the ebb and flow of water. They are seagrasses – marine plants which produce flowers, fruit, and seedlings annually, like their land-based relatives.
These underwater seagrass meadows grow in two...
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