Researchers warn that loss of underwater meadows threatens fisheries, tourism, and coastal protection
STT News Staff
A concerning phenomenon is unfolding beneath the waters surrounding St. Thomas, one that most residents cannot see but may soon feel in their wallets and food supply. Over the past eighteen months, large sections of seagrass meadows have undergone rapid die-off, prompting marine scientists and environmental advocates to warn of cascading ecological and economic consequences for the territory.
The decline, first documented in detail by researchers at the University of the Virgin Islands Center for Marine and Environmental Studies last fall, represents the most significant seagrass loss recorded in territorial waters in at least two decades. What began as localized patches of degradation in shallow bays has expanded to affect multiple areas, including portions of Sapodilla Bay, Lindquist Beach, and sections of the south shore near Red Hook.
“We are witnessing something we have not seen at this scale in our time working here,” said Dr. Marcus Chen, a marine ecologist at UVI who has studied Caribbean seagrass ecosystems for fifteen years. “The speed of decline suggests we are dealing with multiple stressors working together, not a single isolated problem.”
Seagrass meadows, though easily overlooked by casual swimmers and boaters, form the biological foundation of Caribbean coastal ecosystems. The underwater plants serve as nurseries for commercially important fish species including conch, grouper, and snapper. They stabilize sediments, reduce wave energy during storms, and sequester carbon. For a small island territory like St. Thomas that depends heavily on fishing and tourism, the health of seagrass beds is not merely an environmental concern—it is an economic one.
The causes of the current die-off remain under investigation, but preliminary findings point to a combination of factors that researchers say may be unique to this particular period. Water temperature anomalies, including several weeks of unusually warm conditions last summer, appear to have stressed the plants. Simultaneously, local fishermen and marine scientists report murky water conditions and algae blooms in affected areas, suggesting nutrient runoff from land may be playing a role.
“We see the fingerprints of stormwater pollution, warming water, and possibly disease,” explained Dr. Chen. “In a healthy system, seagrass can handle one of these pressures. But when they arrive together, the grass cannot adapt quickly enough.”
The territorial Department of Planning and Natural Resources confirmed in a statement last month that it has launched a formal assessment of seagrass health across St. Thomas and St. John. DPNR Commissioner Aretha Frazier acknowledged the problem during a recent legislative hearing, stating that “protecting our marine resources is essential to our economic resilience.”
However, some community members expressed frustration with what they characterize as a slow official response. Local fishing associations say they have been reporting concerning changes in seagrass beds to government agencies for months before the university study brought the issue into public view.
“We know these waters better than anyone,” said Raymond Baptiste, a commercial fisherman based in Charlotte Amalie who has worked these grounds for thirty-seven years. “When the grass dies, the fish leave. It is simple. We have been telling people this is happening, and now scientists are confirming what we already knew. The question is whether anyone will actually do something about it.”
The economic implications are substantial. According to a 2021 study commissioned by the territorial tourism board, the fishing industry generates approximately forty-two million dollars annually in direct economic activity, with seagrass-dependent fisheries accounting for roughly thirty percent of that total. A sustained seagrass decline could eliminate hundreds of jobs in an economy already stressed by limited employment opportunities and outmigration.
Tourism revenue, which represents the territory’s largest source of economic activity at nearly two billion dollars annually, could also suffer indirectly. Degraded marine ecosystems affect the aesthetic and recreational value of beaches and nearshore waters, factors that influence visitor experiences and return visitation rates.
Community activists are now pushing for immediate action on identified stressors. The St. Thomas Environmental Alliance has launched a campaign calling for stricter stormwater management requirements in residential and commercial developments, arguing that reducing nutrient runoff is the most direct intervention government can implement.
“We cannot control ocean temperatures tomorrow, but we can control how much fertilizer and sewage ends up in our nearshore waters today,” said Alliance director Patricia Gonzalez. “This is a choice we make as a community.”
The territorial government has indicated it is developing a marine restoration strategy, though no timeline has been announced. UVI researchers say they are establishing monitoring stations to track seagrass recovery and identify which conservation approaches prove most effective in local conditions.
For now, the underwater meadows of St. Thomas continue their decline, invisible to most residents but increasingly felt by those whose livelihoods depend on them. Whether the territory can mobilize the resources and political will to reverse the trend remains an open question as the summer months approach—bringing with them the warmer waters that scientists say accelerate seagrass stress.
The next six months, researchers suggest, will be critical in determining whether this die-off becomes a temporary setback or a permanent shift in the marine ecosystem that sustains St. Thomas economically and ecologically.