Unsplash / David Close
03 Dec 2021 Story Ocean & Coasts

7 conservation projects win grants for underwater innovation

Unsplash / David Close

Seven marine conservation projects from around the world have each received grants of US$80,000 from the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and its partner, the International Coral Reef Initiative.

The funding is designed to help restore and preserve seagrass meadows, mangrove forests and coral reefs. UNEP received more than 430 grant proposals from 93 countries, ultimately choosing winners from the Caribbean, Africa and Asia.

“We selected projects based on their innovation in terms of using new conservation, restoration and sustainability approaches for three key marine habitats: mangroves, seagrass meadows and coral reefs,” said Gabriel Grimsditch, UNEP Programme Management Officer.

Those three ecosystems support a myriad of sea life, store carbon dioxide, and protect communities from storm surges and flooding. However, they are under siege from climate change, irresponsible coastal development and pollution, which experts say threatens life above and below water.

The Status of Coral Reefs of the World 2020 report published by the Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network and supported by UNEP found that 14 per cent of the world’s corals have disappeared in the last decade.

The report highlights that whilst coral reefs cover only 0.2 per cent of the seafloor, they support at least 25 per cent of marine species and underpin the safety, coastal protection, well being, food and economic security of hundreds of millions of people.

These grants are made possible through support from the International Coral Reef Initiative with funding from the United States of America’s Department of State, the Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, and the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority.

We selected projects based on their innovation in terms of using new conservation, restoration and sustainability approaches for three key marine habitats: mangroves, seagrass meadows and coral reefs.

Gabriel Grimsditch, UNEP Programme Management Officer

Here is a closer look at the winners.

Restoring coral reefs in Belize

Fragments of Hope, a community-based organization in the Placencia Peninsula of southern Belize, re-seeds devastated Caribbean reefs with diverse and resilient corals. With the grant, Fragments of Hope will expand its work to the northern side of Belize, an area plagued by stony coral tissue loss disease. The condition rapidly kills corals, leaving behind a bright white skeleton. The organization will also support the nationwide mapping of coral reefs that are more resistant to warming seas, considered key as climate change heats the world’s oceans.

Protecting mangroves in Costa Rica

Misión Tiburon will replant mangroves in the Hammerhead Shark Sanctuary at Costa Rica’s Golfo Dulce. The wetlands are a nursery for the critically endangered scalloped hammerhead shark. The project, established in 2009, is focused on conserving other marine life as well by reviving mangrove forests, one of the area’s most important and threatened coastal ecosystems.

Reviving coral reefs in The Bahamas

coral reefs in the Bahamas
Photo: Unsplash / Fernando Jorge

The Perry Institute for Marine Science plans to use the new funding to advance a community program to restore coral reefs in New Providence Island, Nassau. Restoration of these sensitive undersea ecosystems had been done previously but largely by scientists and managers.

Replanting seagrass fields in The Gambia

Seagrass underwater
Photo: Unsplash / Benjamin L. Jones

Unregulated fishing and the lack of awareness of the importance of seagrass in The Gambia have hindered the natural regeneration of this undersea plant. Now, a project by The Gambia Department of Parks and Wildlife Management is aiming to reverse the decline of seagrass. It is striving to become the first community-led seagrass conservation and restoration effort in the south-western beach communities in Gunjur and Kartong.

Protecting seagrass ecosystems in Kenya

Seagrass meadow
Photo: Unsplash / Benjamin L. Jones

This grant will be implemented by Flora & Fauna International and the Kenya Marine and Fisheries Research Institute. The two organizations will use the grant to map out core seagrass habitats and advocate for increased protections for the plants, helping to safeguard fish, turtles and Kenyan dugong populations that live among the plants. The organizations will also further the restoration of mangrove forests, another vital ecosystem.

Creating “blue” economic opportunities in Madagascar

The seagrass in three locally managed marine areas in the southwest of Madagascar, Velondriake, Manjaboake and Teariake, are threatened by destructive fishing, especially beach seining. Blue Ventures Conservation seeks to train community members to map and monitor the seagrass in the three conservation areas. The organization also plans to help 150 small-scale fishers develop sea cucumber farms, diversifying their income.

Re-enforcing marine governance in the Philippines

Coral reef in Cebu, Philipines
Photo: Unsplash / Hitoshi Namura

Using the grant, C3 Philippines wants to develop a governance system that integrates conservation and sustainability into the use of three coastal marine ecosystems—coral reefs, mangroves and, seagrasses—in the Green Island Bay. The project proposes the piloting of novel management and governance models for coastal marine ecosystems.

 

The conservation grants come amid the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021-2030), which seeks to ensure that ocean science supports national actions to sustainably manage underwater ecosystems and contributes to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

 

Related Sustainable Development Goals