SNAPP TEAM:Improving Coastal Health
What wastewater pollution guidelines and sanitation planning strategies will enable sanitation and conservation practitioners to work together to improve both human and marine ecosystem health?

Pollution from unsafely managed sanitation is a serious and often overlooked global problem. Solutions are desperately needed to reduce negative impacts on local and national economies, public health, fisheries, and coastal resilience, all of which will be exacerbated by the impacts of climate change. 

 

OUR APPROACH: This team of experts from the sanitation and conservation sectors will synthesize existing processes, data, and experiences, with a focus on coral reef areas. By reevaluating effluent guideline values and creating intervention guides, we will equip practitioners with the tools to develop interdisciplinary, comprehensive strategies for improving sanitation management and enabling long-lasting conservation action.

Team Status: COMPLETED
Team Critical Challenge: Ocean Sustainability
Key Products
A Guide for Integrated Conservation & Sanitation Programs and Approaches

Human and ecosystem health are inextricably linked, yet strategies to improve both are addressed in siloed ways. In an effort to de-silo solutions to wastewater management this guide offers practitioners an approach to integrate conservation and sanitation programs.

Coastal Pollution Toolkit

This 3 part toolkit from WCS and SNAPP’s Improving Coastal Health working group offers users tools and strategies for pollution assessment and monitoring and methods for the collection of in-situ water quality data to help safeguard coastal climate strongholds.

Managing Watersheds for Coral Reefs and Public Health: A Vibrant Oceans Initiative Whitepaper

This paper presents innovative solutions that incentivize the large-scale, sustained action required to both improve water quality in watersheds and prevent water quality impacts on coral reef ecosystems. The solutions use holistic approaches to integrated watershed management that bridge social and ecological systems and provide important co-benefits to human well-being.

Click here to see more products from this SNAPP Team
Team
Leaders
Amelia Wenger
WCS / University of Queensland
Kim Falinski
The Nature Conservancy
Jos Hill
The Pew Charitable Trusts
Aaron Jenkins
University of Sydney / Edith Cowan University
Jacqueline Thomas
University of Sydney / Ifakara Health Institute
Members
Dominic Andradi-Brown
WWF US
Michelle Devlin
Centre for Environment, Fisheries, and Aquaculture Science
Janet Edmonds
Conservation International
Nicole Auil Gomez
Wildlife Conservation Society Belize
Katie Heffner
RARE
Kate Holmes
WCS Indonesia
Evelyn Gomez Juarez
University of Queensland
Thammarat Koottatep
Asian Institute of Technology
Caitie Kuempel
Griffith University
Joleah Lamb
University of California, Irvine
Manuel Mejia
Coral Reef Alliance
Jean Mensa
Wildlife Conservation Society Tanzania
Jenny Myton
Coral Reef Alliance
Mosese Nairiva
Water Authority Fiji
Eileen Nalley
University of Hawai'i at Manoa
Shadrack Omwenga
Sanivation
Tanvi Oza
WaterAid
Sudhir Pillay
South African Water Research Commission
Ratih Rimayanti
WCS Indonesia
Erin Symonds
Water for Good
Kelly Trott
Imagine H2O
Lillian Tuttle
University of Hawai'i
Konstantina Velkushanova
UN-IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
Ama Wakwella
University of Queensland
Advisors
Stacy Jupiter
Wildlife Conservation Society
Chris Corbin
United Nations Environment Programme
Helen Fox
Coral Reef Alliance
Carl Hensman
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Cheri Recchia
Summit Foundation
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