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  1. We monitor all areas and countries affected by sargassum. We share best practices for preserving coastal sea fauna and flora. Sargassum seaweed, originally beneficial to the marine ecosystem, has been spreading dangerously since 2011 due to human pollution.

    • Sargassum

      Conclusion. A first conclusion was obvious: to prevent the...

    • Forecast

      Sargassum map – Caribbean Sea. How are Sargassum stranding...

    • News

      News - Sargassum Monitoring – OFFICIAL MAP & FORECASTS

    • About Us

      For scientists: 1/ Data accessibility: since 2018, Sargassum...

  2. Official sargassum Map daily updated ! Immerse yourself in nature’s wrath with our interactive map. Explore these once idyllic tropical paradises, now overrun by the inexorable tide of sargassum. Once pristine sandy beaches are regularly overrun by this nightmarish brown algae.

  3. 14 lis 2024 · The GEO Blue Planet Initiative, in collaboration with IOCARIBE of IOC-UNESCO, AtlantOS, the Atlantic International Research (AIR) Center and other partners, have developed this hub to provide centralized access to information and tools for the monitoring and management of sargassum blooms.

  4. It’s an invitation to discover, preserve, and understand the Sargassum bloom that the Atlantic-Caribbean region has been experiencing annually since 2011. The official Sargassum map 2022 bears witness to this Sargassum seaweed phenomenon, which is not natural but a consequence of human pollution.

  5. 2024 Sargassum seaweed forecast map & reports. #1 resource on Sargassum seaweed blob, update, sargassum-free beaches in Florida, Cancun, Mexico, Caribbean.

  6. SaWS Clickable Map. The Sargassum Watch System (SaWS) is designed to use satellite data and numerical models to detect and track pelagic Saragassum in near-real time. Pelagic Sargassum seaweed (Image courtesy of Tracy Villareal) is a brown macroalgae floating on the ocean surface.

  7. 7 kwi 2023 · Patches of floating brown seaweedknown as Sargassumhave stretched from the west coast of Africa to the Gulf of Mexico in what is known as the “Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt.” In March 2023, scientists found that the amount of Sargassum floating in the belt was the largest of any March on record.