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Science and policy lessons learned from a decade of adaptation to the emergent risk of sargassum proliferation across the tropical Atlantic

Science and policy lessons learned from a decade of adaptation to the emergent risk of sargassum proliferation across the tropical Atlantic
Science and policy lessons learned from a decade of adaptation to the emergent risk of sargassum proliferation across the tropical Atlantic
Climatic and anthropogenic changes appear to be driving the emergence of new ecosystem and human health risks. As new risks emerge, and the severity or frequency of known risks change, we ask: what evidence is there of past adaptations to emergent risks? What scientific and policy processes lead to adaptive solutions that minimise the impacts of these events, and draw out opportunities? We identify science and policy lessons learned from coping with, and responding to, the sudden arrival of brown macroalgae (pelagic sargassum) that has proliferated across the tropical Atlantic since 2011. Drawing on an evidence base developed from a systematic search of literature relating to sargassum seaweed, and using event timelines and word clouds, we provide an analysis of lessons learned from a case study of adaptive responses across three continents to an emergent risk over the course of a decade. We reflect on successes and failures as well as opportunities taken in building adaptive capacity to address the risk in four key domains: policy, knowledge and evidence, monitoring and early warning, and technology and valorisation. Failures include: lack of environmental risk registries; missed opportunities to share monitoring data; and lack of a shared approach to manage the risk. Successes include: development of national management strategies; open-access knowledge hubs, networks and webinars sharing information and best practice; semi-operational early advisory systems using open access remote sensing data; numerous innovations customising clean-up and harvesting equipment, and research and development of new uses and value-added products.
adaptation, algal bloom, climate change, coping, environmental risk, pelagic sargassum, science-policy interface
2515-7620
Dominguez Almela, Victoria
c46c331c-e5ba-4da9-8f58-207a4999e02e
Appeaning Addo, Kwasi
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Corbett, Jack
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Cumberbatch, Janice
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Dash, Jadu
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Marsh, Robert
702c2e7e-ac19-4019-abd9-a8614ab27717
Oxenford, Hazel
1e6243ac-340b-48eb-8129-02c794ec826d
Tonon, Thierry
388adba4-77c4-4257-915d-0788827bcec0
Van Der Plank, Sien
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Webber, Mona
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Tompkins, Emma L.
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et al.
Dominguez Almela, Victoria
c46c331c-e5ba-4da9-8f58-207a4999e02e
Appeaning Addo, Kwasi
33cf8f94-aa05-45c3-bb9b-5a0d19723984
Corbett, Jack
ad651655-ac70-4072-a36f-92165e296ce2
Cumberbatch, Janice
752aeeb8-c89c-4bd2-a19a-c96c28ba1b05
Dash, Jadu
69e5776c-02f9-4485-894e-c5551d95eabb
Marsh, Robert
702c2e7e-ac19-4019-abd9-a8614ab27717
Oxenford, Hazel
1e6243ac-340b-48eb-8129-02c794ec826d
Tonon, Thierry
388adba4-77c4-4257-915d-0788827bcec0
Van Der Plank, Sien
de5c670f-7f26-4396-9301-a5e58dd3d77f
Webber, Mona
ba7736d1-e4fb-4d40-b84e-9cacc281fbb5
Tompkins, Emma L.
a6116704-7140-4e37-bea1-2cbf39b138c3

Dominguez Almela, Victoria, Appeaning Addo, Kwasi and Corbett, Jack , et al. (2023) Science and policy lessons learned from a decade of adaptation to the emergent risk of sargassum proliferation across the tropical Atlantic. Environmental Research Communications, 5, [061002]. (doi:10.1088/2515-7620/acd493).

Record type: Letter

Abstract

Climatic and anthropogenic changes appear to be driving the emergence of new ecosystem and human health risks. As new risks emerge, and the severity or frequency of known risks change, we ask: what evidence is there of past adaptations to emergent risks? What scientific and policy processes lead to adaptive solutions that minimise the impacts of these events, and draw out opportunities? We identify science and policy lessons learned from coping with, and responding to, the sudden arrival of brown macroalgae (pelagic sargassum) that has proliferated across the tropical Atlantic since 2011. Drawing on an evidence base developed from a systematic search of literature relating to sargassum seaweed, and using event timelines and word clouds, we provide an analysis of lessons learned from a case study of adaptive responses across three continents to an emergent risk over the course of a decade. We reflect on successes and failures as well as opportunities taken in building adaptive capacity to address the risk in four key domains: policy, knowledge and evidence, monitoring and early warning, and technology and valorisation. Failures include: lack of environmental risk registries; missed opportunities to share monitoring data; and lack of a shared approach to manage the risk. Successes include: development of national management strategies; open-access knowledge hubs, networks and webinars sharing information and best practice; semi-operational early advisory systems using open access remote sensing data; numerous innovations customising clean-up and harvesting equipment, and research and development of new uses and value-added products.

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Accepted/In Press date: 11 May 2023
Published date: 20 June 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: this publication is supported by the United Kingdom Economic and Social Research Council through the Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) project, Teleconnected SARgassum risks across the Atlantic: building capacity for TRansformational Adaptation in the Caribbean and West Africa (SARTRAC), grant number ES/T002964/1. The authors are grateful for the collaboration of the entire SARTRAC team which has informed this work. Funding Information: the authors have declared that no competing interests exist. They wish to thank the three reviewers who offered detailed comments, these have significantly strengthened this paper. Thanks to Frank Muller-Karger at USF for comments on a final draft.
Keywords: adaptation, algal bloom, climate change, coping, environmental risk, pelagic sargassum, science-policy interface

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 476915
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476915
ISSN: 2515-7620
PURE UUID: 294e60d6-7cc6-4ec8-8ae5-f44eb0eddc24
ORCID for Victoria Dominguez Almela: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4877-5967
ORCID for Jack Corbett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2005-7162
ORCID for Sien Van Der Plank: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6650-4111
ORCID for Emma L. Tompkins: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4825-9797

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 19 May 2023 16:35
Last modified: 21 Nov 2024 03:03

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Contributors

Author: Kwasi Appeaning Addo
Author: Jack Corbett ORCID iD
Author: Janice Cumberbatch
Author: Jadu Dash
Author: Robert Marsh
Author: Hazel Oxenford
Author: Thierry Tonon
Author: Mona Webber
Corporate Author: et al.

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