Divers spot endangered seahorses in polluted Greek lagoon

·

Divers have reported a rare sighting of hundreds of endangered seahorses in a polluted lagoon in western Greece and warn they could be lost if the area is not cleaned up.

“We see hundreds here and if they remain we have hope,” said diver, Vasilis Mentogiannis, an expert in underwater surveys who has led efforts to protect the seahorses. “I don’t think there is a similar situation to this anywhere else in Greece.”

A protected species threatened by overfishing and pollution, seahorses need an environment full of organisms to feed on and plant life to hide.

A seahorse rests on the seabed of the Aitoliko lagoon, Greece, May 31, 2020. Photo: Vassilis Mentogiannis/Handout via REUTERS.

Older fishermen say Aitoliko lagoon in the northern Patras Gulf used to contain thousands of seahorses but their numbers have plummeted in recent years and local divers were amazed when they found a group of the creatures.

“It was the first time I had spotted seahorses and they were in a place I least expected,” said local diver Labros Charelos.

Aitoliko, which reaches depths of up to 30 meters, is linked by narrow channels to a shallow lagoon open to the sea. Over recent years, leaks from damaged irrigation canals as well as factory waste and fertilizers have cut off oxygen and polluted the lagoon, which on windy days gives off a “rotten egg” smell from hydrogen sulfide produced by its oxygen-depleted waters.

Divers have spotted endangered seahorses in a polluted Greek lagoon.

“Near the surface it is viable, it’s the deeper depths that are a problem,” said University of Patras Professor, George Katselis.

Spyros Kariofyllis has been fishing in Aitoliko for decades and says he has reached a point where he doesn’t catch anything.

“When I throw my live bait in … when it reaches five and half meters it dies, and not only does it die but there is no living organism to eat it down there,” he said.

A seahorse swims in the Aitoliko lagoon, Greece, June 13, 2021. Photo: Vassilis Mentogiannis/Handout via REUTERS.

Helped by 21 million euros of EU funds, the government is going ahead with a long-delayed study on repairing the damage but Mentogiannis said time was short for the seahorses.

For the moment, they have found a spot with oxygen and food, far from fishing areas but if hydrogen sulfide levels increase, it may be too late.

“We could lose them,” he said.

Source: Reuters.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Fans and members rally behind Labi Haliti as Sydney Olympic climbs the ladder

Sydney Olympic FC’s commanding 3-0 win over NWS Spirit FC has not only kept the team’s momentum alive in the 2025 season.

How families celebrated a rare unified Easter

For the first time in eight years, all branches of Christianity—Catholic, Protestant, and Orthodox—celebrated Easter on the same weekend.

George Mastrocostas pushes ahead with project amid Gold Coast housing surge

As the Gold Coast races to meet a looming population milestone of one million residents by 2045, George Mastrocostas is pushing ahead.

Tina Stefanou explores Melbourne’s urban fringe in immersive ACCA exhibition

Artist Tina Stefanou’s latest exhibition, You Can’t See Speed, now showing at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA).

Sydney man Zacharias Giatras granted bail after Rockdale crash leaves man critical

Zacharias Giatras, a 19-year-old plumbing apprentice, has been granted bail after being charged over a serious crash in Sydney’s south.

You May Also Like

The Greek Herald calls on children to design its Christmas print cover

Calling all children aged 5 to 15! The Greek Herald wants YOU to design its special Christmas edition print cover.

Religious Communities Advisory Council in NSW convenes for inaugural meeting

The members of the NSW Government’s newly created Religious Communities Advisory Council met for the first time on Monday.

Stefania Liberakakis releases Eurovision 2020 entry song “SUPERG!RL”

One month after Stefania was confirmed as Greece’s act for Eurovision 2020, her song “SUPERG!RL” for Rotterdam has now been released.