“…How seagrass systems might contribute to these emissions has received comparably little attention, although valuable studies have been published (Bahlmann et al, ; Barber & Carlson, ; Deborde et al, ; Garcias‐Bonet & Duarte, ; Oremland, ). Temperature increases have been shown to enhance methane emissions from freshwater systems (Yvon‐Durocher, Hulatt, Woodward, & Trimmer, ; Yvon‐Durocher, Montoya, Woodward, Jones, & Trimmer, ), and recently, it has been shown that methane emission from seagrass meadows rises substantially when seagrasses are disturbed (Burkholz, Garcias‐Bonet, & Duarte, ; Lyimo et al, ), and based on calculations of methane emission in seagrass sediments from the Red Sea, it has been suggested that the present estimations of methane emissions from natural systems might have to be increased by about 30% to account for hitherto unrecognized contributions from seagrass systems (Garcias‐Bonet & Duarte, ). In general, the methane production of biological systems is closely correlated with the productivity of the plants within the system (Borges, Speeckaert, Champenois, Scranton, & Gypens, ; Bridgham et al, ), and for wetlands in particular, there is a clear positive correlation between emission of methane and net ecosystem production (Whiting & Chanton, ).…”