{"id":101349,"date":"2023-03-16T16:00:03","date_gmt":"2023-03-16T10:30:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.icsf.net\/?post_type=newss&p=101349"},"modified":"2023-03-17T11:08:42","modified_gmt":"2023-03-17T05:38:42","slug":"in-sri-lanka-and-beyond-seagrass-key-to-livelihoods-marine-habitats","status":"publish","type":"newss","link":"https:\/\/www.icsf.net\/newss\/in-sri-lanka-and-beyond-seagrass-key-to-livelihoods-marine-habitats\/","title":{"rendered":"In Sri Lanka and beyond, seagrass key to livelihoods, marine habitats"},"content":{"rendered":"

The fishers in Illuppaikadawei village in the northern district of Mannar mostly use fence fishery, where they erect a series of poles and tie a net around them during high tide. When the tide retreats, the fish get trapped in the net. \u201cWe prefer to set up these traps near the seagrass beds, as there are more fish, crabs and squids,\u201d says Angie Thomas, a fisher who practices fence fishery, a family tradition. Thomas and other fisher households in the village get sufficient catch to sustain their daily needs despite their fishing area being quite small, thanks to the seagrass meadows on the coastline. \u201cSeagrass meadows support a great abundance and diversity of fish and invertebrates where a number of commercially and recreationally important species have been linked to seagrass at some stage of their life cycle,\u201d says Susantha Udagedara, of the Blue Resources Trust (BRT), an organization that started studying seagrasses more than a decade ago.<\/p>\n

In a study that delves into socioeconomic factors across 147 villages in Cambodia, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Tanzania, a group of scientists including Udagedara report that seagrass is the most preferred habitat for fishing across villages in all the four countries studied due to the reliability of a good catch.<\/p>\n