then they move back out to sea. the wildlife presenter steve backshall has dived here, and says boat anchors and mooring chains can damage the sea bed. they completely destroy all the substrate around it, which means that all the seagrass dies, and it gets rid of that binding substrate, which then washes away as sand. and so you just end up with these big, barren circles around all the moorings. and within that, nothing can live and particularly not seahorses. so here s a solution. the seahorse trust is installing this environmentally friendly design. instead of a chain, the mooring is attached to a fixed point in the sea bed via a large rubber line that stretches with the tide and minimises damage. divers put this screw anchor into the sea bed. it goes in around seven feet deep, into the sea bed, then connected to these rubber pieces here thick, dense rubber.
dies, and it gets rid of that binding substrate, which then washes away as sand. and so you just end up with these big, barren circles around all the moorings. and within that, nothing can live, and particularly not seahorses. so, here s a solution. the seahorse trust is installing this environmentally friendly design. instead of a chain, the mooring s attached to a fixed point in the sea bed via a rubber line that stretches with the tide and minimises damage. divers put this screw anchor into the sea bed. it goes in around seven feet deep into the sea bed, then connected to these rubber pieces here thick, dense rubber. this is what replaces the chains on a traditional mooring that are said to do so much of the damage. this is held vertically by these floats here. there s then another rubberised cable that goes up to the buoy, which obviously floats on the surface. a boat can come up
and particularly not seahorses. so, here s a solution. the seahorse trust is installing this environmentally friendly design. instead of a chain, the mooring is attached to a fixed point in the sea bed via a rubber line that stretches with the tide and minimises damage. divers put this screw anchor into the sea bed. it goes in around seven feet deep, into the sea bed, then connected to these rubber pieces here thick, dense rubber. this is what replaces the chains on a traditional mooring that are said to do so much of the damage. this is held vertically by these floats here. there s then another rubberised cable that goes up to the buoy, which obviously floats on the surface. a boat can come up and clip onto there. the university of southampton is monitoring the efficacy of the eco moorings. and, if proved to be beneficial, it will mean seafarers and seahorses can co exist successfully.
it s the noise, the anchors, the general movement of everything seems to affect the seahorses. they re very prone to stress, and so if you can sort of reduce that stress, then they re quite happy, relaxed seahorses. if they have a lot of stress, then they move back out to sea. the wildlife presenter steve backshall has dived here and says boat anchors and mooring chains can damage the sea bed. they completely destroy all the substrate around it, which means that all the seagrass dies, and it gets rid of that binding substrate, which then washes away as sand. and so you just end up with these big, barren circles around all the moorings. and within that, nothing can live, and particularly not seahorses. so, here s a solution. the seahorse trust is installing this environmentally friendly design. instead of a chain, the mooring s attached to a fixed point in the sea bed via a rubber line that stretches with the tide and minimises damage. divers put this screw
); (TBTCO) - Công ty cổ phần Cao su Đà Nẵng (mã DRC, sàn HOSE) vừa công bố báo cáo tài chính quý II/2021. Tại báo cáo lưu chuyển tiền tệ, công ty ghi nhận dòng tiền âm hơn 51,3 tỷ đồng trong nửa đầu năm 2021, trái ngược với dòng tiền dương 381,7 tỷ đồng của nửa đầu năm 2020.
Ngoài ra, dòng tiền thuần từ hoạt động đầu tư cũng âm 67,4 tỷ đồng, dòng tiền thuần từ hoạt động tài chính âm gần 40,3 tỷ đồng.