T.A.L.A.M.O.N.E

€ 9,500 awarded

Status: ongoing

Project duration: 06/2025 – 12/2026

Grantee: Bioscience Research Center (BsRC)

Location: Talamone Bay (GR)

© Angela Tozzi @angelatozziphotos

The Challenge

The coastal and marine waters of the Maremma and the Tuscan Archipelago have always been a cornerstone for local culture and economy. Today, however, these ecosystems are under heavy pressure: human activities, climate change, and a general lack of environmental awareness are damaging critical underwater habitats. The Posidonia oceanica meadows – which are essential for protecting the coast from erosion, storing carbon, and hosting marine life – are shrinking and increasingly threatened by human impact and microplastic pollution.

 

The Solution

This project turns field-based marine research into a practical tool for environmental management and community engagement. Led by the Bioscience Research Center (BsRC) alongside local institutions, the initiative pairs scientific monitoring with hands-on public action. Following a “One Health” approach, the project gets citizens, tourists, and schools directly involved in citizen science and coastal sampling, showing that protecting our seas is directly connected to the well-being and awareness of the local community.

Project Objectives & Deliverables

  • Scientific Monitoring Campaign: Mapping and assessing the health of the submerged Posidonia oceanica meadows in the southern part of Talamone Bay to quantify the area’s natural capital.
  • Permanent Training Pathway: Scientific seminars, advanced sampling workshops, and educational courses designed for local marine operators and conservation volunteers.
  • Public Awareness Events: Coastal excursions and citizen science activities open to the public, including paddleboard outings to monitor seawater pH, salinity, and temperature.
  • Innovative Communication Campaign: Launching a widespread environmental outreach campaign through an original comic series created by a professional cartoonist.
  • Community Microplastic Sampling: Practical workshops where children and students collect and analyze beach sea balls (egagropili) to detect and track microplastic pollution.
  • Institutional Press Conference: A public meeting with municipal representatives, TEF directors, and scientific experts to present the data collected and share the project’s results.
© Angela Tozzi @angelatozziphotos
© Angela Tozzi @angelatozziphotos

Long-term Impact

By bringing together professional field research and community-led science, the project creates a practical, working model for managing regional marine areas. Alongside the collection of continuous ecological data, the main goal is to trigger a real shift in environmental awareness among residents and visitors in Talamone Bay. The creation of a lasting network of local collaboration ensures that the community itself becomes the guardian of these waters, protecting the marine ecosystem for the future.

© Angela Tozzi @angelatozziphotos