The Impact of Sargassum Inundations on the Turks and Caicos Islands
brown tide
0303 health sciences
tour operators
HF
seagrass
QK
15. Life on land
<i>Thallasia testudinum</i>
03 medical and health sciences
13. Climate action
fisheries
tourism
beach
14. Life underwater
SH
management
sargassum brown tide
DOI:
10.3390/phycology1020007
Publication Date:
2021-11-03T02:14:52Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
Since 2011, holopelagic Sargassum fluitans and natans have been arriving en masse to the wider Caribbean region and West Africa, impacting near-shore habitats and coastal communities. We examined the impacts of the Sargassum influx on tourism-related businesses through face-to-face interviews and focus groups and on near-shore seagrass beds through in-water surveys in the Turks and Caicos Islands (TCI). Substantial accumulations of sargassum were found on the beaches of South Caicos and Middle Creek Cay in 2018 and 2019, including a Sargassum brown tide in 2018. A variety of different approaches to removing sargassum from the beaches were mentioned and a desire from local businesses as well as local authorities to find a sustainable, cost-effective solution to what is viewed by many as a serious problem. The brown tide and sargassum accumulating as a layer on the benthos inside the seagrass beds caused significant loss of Thalassia testudinum. Halodule wrightii, macroalgae and sand plains were found in the areas lost by T. testudinum. This finding suggests that, if a cost-effective end use for sargassum could be identified, harvesting material in inshore waters rather than when it has arrived on the beach would have dual benefits.
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