“…Seagrasses are marine flowering plants that are widely distributed along the coastlines of tropical and temperate seas (Short, Carruthers, Dennison, & Waycott, ), and seagrass beds provide valuable ecosystem services to humankind (Cullen‐Unsworth et al, ; Jackson, Rees, Wilding, & Attrill, ), such as the stabilization of coastlines (Gacia & Duarte, ). Seagrasses are highly productive (Duarte & Chiscano, ) and can efficiently sequester large quantities of CO 2 ; they therefore serve as important carbon sinks (Fourqurean et al, ; Huang, Lee, Chung, Hsiao, & Lin, ) and influence the coastal carbon cycle (Duarte et al, ). Seagrass leaves and rhizomes provide myriad habitats for a varity of infauna and epifauna (Hori et al, ; Orth & Heck, ), and seagrass beds are consequently important nursery grounds for a plethora of marine species (Heck, Hays, & Orth, ).…”