Life’s a Beach - Tropical Beach Microbiomes in a Changing World
About the Project
Tropical beaches are among the world’s most heavily used and impacted coastal environments and underpin a major tourism industry across Southeast Asia. Despite their ecological and economic importance, their microbial biodiversity and ecosystem functions remain poorly understood compared with other coastal habitats such as mangroves, salt marshes, and rocky shores. This project aims to address that knowledge gap through an ambitious regional study of tropical beach sand microbiomes across contrasting environmental settings.
This PhD project will examine how microbial communities in tropical sandy shorelines vary across seasons, sediment types, and gradients of human impact. The work will seek to define the structure and functional potential of healthy tropical beach microbiomes and evaluate their contribution to coastal carbon cycling relative to other coastal habitats. The project will also investigate how anthropogenic pressures influence microbial community structure and ecosystem functionality, with a particular focus on the impacts of tourism-related activities on beach ecosystem health. Finally, the study will explore how simulated climate change scenarios may alter microbial community resilience and ecosystem processes in tropical sandy beaches.
The project combines field-based coastal science with modern environmental microbiology and data-driven ecological analysis. Research activities will include extensive field sampling in Singapore and selected coastal sites in Thailand and Malaysia, providing opportunities for regional collaboration and international field experience. The student will work within an interdisciplinary research environment focused on marine sustainability, environmental biotechnology, and microbial ecology.
This PhD offers an opportunity to contribute to globally important questions surrounding coastal ecosystem health and climate resilience in rapidly developing tropical regions. The findings are expected to advance scientific understanding of sandy beach ecosystems while also informing future approaches to coastal management, pollution monitoring, and environmental conservation in Southeast Asia.
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