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BBC News

May 2, 2026

A small orange-coloured shore crab - Carcinus maenas - sat on a blade of seagrass in one of the research sites off the Orkney Islands in Scotland.
BBC Newsby Steffan Messenger·May 2, 2026

Sewage having 'alarming' impact on underwater forests in UK rivers

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left 0.10
Source quality70/100
Factual ratio75/100
Framing30/100

Sewage and agricultural pollution having 'alarming' impact on UK's underwater forests 5 hours agoSteffan MessengerWales environment correspondentLewis M. JefferiesSeagrass meadows are usually teeming with life, like this shore crabSewage and agricultural pollution in rivers is having an "alarming" knock-on impact on marine life in underwater forests along the British coastline, according to new research.Scientists found seagrass meadows affected by excessive nutrients in the water - caused by sewage, fertilisers, manure and industry wastewater - had far fewer and less variety of small invertebrates like crabs, shrimps and snails."People don't want to swim in seas polluted by sewage," said Dr Benjamin Jones from Project Seagrass, which carried out the research with Swansea University."But this is one of the first studies of its kind to show that some of those nutrient inputs... are having an impact on the animals too."Project SeagrassDr Benjamin Jones described seagrass beds as underwater forestsSeagrasses are flowering plants that live in shallow, sheltered areas of the coast, forming dense underwater meadows.It is estimated that a single hectare can harbour as many as 100 million invertebrates."If we think of seagrass meadows as forests, those invertebrates are basically insects that help it function in the marine environment," explained Jones.Lewis M.

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Lean: -0.100 · Source quality 70/100 · Factual vs opinion 75/100.

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Political leanleft 0.10Source quality70/100Factual ratio75/100Framing30/100

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