Université des Antilles – Centre de gestion des ressources et d'études environnementales

Aperçu du projet

Adapting to a New Reality: Managing Responses to Influxes of Sargassum Seaweed in the Eastern Caribbean as Ecosystem Hazards and Opportunities (SargAdapt)

Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Saint Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines

Durée36 mois
Budget total du projetUSD 1,296,093.00
Subvention pour les installations EbAUSD 981,393.00
CofinancementUSD 314,700.00

SargAdapt reduced the impacts of sargassum influxes and improved adaptation across the Eastern Caribbean by converting a climate-linked ecosystem hazard into opportunities for socio-economic development. The project combined demonstration activities, livelihood diversification, primary research, forecasting, knowledge exchange, and community networking to support more sustainable sargassum management and protect coastal ecosystems and livelihoods.

Objectifs clés

  • Develop appropriate management responses that reduce damage from sargassum influxes
  • Strengthen the capacity of coastal communities and stakeholders to cope, adapt, and plan
  • Test beneficial uses of sargassum for livelihood diversification and resilience
  • Improve research, forecasting, knowledge sharing, and regional coordination

Focus sur l'écosystème

Sandy beaches, coral reefs, seagrass beds, mangroves, and other coastal and near-shore ecosystems affected by sargassum influxes.

Communautés impliquées

Ce projet a été mis en œuvre dans les communautés et zones de projet suivantes :

  • Ten coastal communities across Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Saint Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines
  • Five demonstration communities across the participating countries

Organisations de mise en œuvre

Organisation chef de file :
The University of the West Indies, Centre for Resource Management and Environmental Studies (UWI-CERMES)

UWI-CERMES led the regional SargAdapt initiative, coordinating research, demonstration projects, forecasting, stakeholder networking, and the development of practical management and livelihood responses.

Partenaires du projet

  • Caribbean Natural Resources Institute (CANARI), informal collaboration
  • The University of North Carolina Wilmington
  • St. George’s University, Grenada
  • Marine Spatial Information Solutions

Site web

https://www.cavehill.uwi.edu/cermes/

Fiche d'information du projet

Download Project Fact Sheet