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Sargasssum brings another golden tide on our shorelines

Sargasssum brings another ‘golden tide’ on our shorelines Rahanna Juman, Institute of Marine Affairs For yet another year, massive quantities of sargassum are seen washing up along our coasts and is causing concern among fisherfolk and other beach users. This new source of sargassum is now linked to climate change and ocean eutrophication, and these are likely to continue supporting significant sargassum blooms into the future. As such, annual mass influxes of sargassum into the Caribbean Sea are now being considered as the new normal, requiring sustainable management responses and long-term adaptation (Desrochers et al. 2020). Pelagic (free-floating) sargassum, a brown algae from the equatorial Atlantic, comprises a mixture of two or possibly three different sargassum species, namely sargassum fluitans III, sargassum natans I, and sargassum natans VIII (Schell, Goodwin, and Siuda 2015) that forms large floating mats often referred to as “golden tides.” These species are

IMA donates books to Nalis

IMA donates books to Nalis Monday 8 March 2021 Krystal Ganaselal, information officer/officer-in-charge of Information Centre, left; Dr Rahanna Juman, CEO of IMA; Paula Greene, acting executive director; Primatie Persad, acting director Educational Library Services Division; and Cherylann Quamina-Baptiste, acting director Heritage Library Division of Nalis. - THE Institute of Marine Affairs (IMA) handed over 162 copies of its new publication, The Mangrove Forests of Trinidad and Tobago, to the National Library and Information System Authority (Nalis) on February 23. A media release said the book, which was launched in celebration of World Wetlands Day 2021 (February 2), was written by Dr Rahanna Juman, Hamish Asmath, Nikia Gooding and Gyasi Collins, and funded by the Point Lisas Nitrogen Limited.

Blue economy innovators to get startup funds, technical help

Blue economy innovators to get startup funds, technical help Article by February 26, 2021 Innovative entrepreneurs in the blue economy are to get the chance to start up their projects under a new initiative – the Blue Economy Innovation Challenge – that will give them up to $320,000 (US$160,000) in grant funding. The challenge was announced on Thursday by Compete Caribbean, a partnership of the Inter-American Development Bank, the British and Canadian foreign aid agencies and the Caribbean Development Bank. Compete Caribbean’s executive director, Dr Sylvia Dohnert said the project seeks to find innovative business models in the Caribbean, that apply new technologies and solutions to aid in the growth and sustainability of the blue economy. According to Dr Dohnert, the purpose of this challenge is to stimulate innovation in the private sector.

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