Skip to Content
Home
Apply
Apply
Main Applications
Extra Applications
Capability & Capacity Applications
Projects
News
Resources
Resources
Finance Guidance and Claims Templates
Change Request Forms
Report and Review Templates
Gender Equality and Social Inclusion
Risk Management
Monitoring, Evaluation and Learning
Safeguarding
Workshops and Webinars
Darwin Initiative Round 32 Funding Update Webinar, May 2026
Darwin Initiative Seminar Series, April 2026
New Projects Workshops, Oct 2025
BCFs Gender Equality and Social Inclusion Webinar, March 2025
BCFs Project Reporting Refresher Webinar, March 2025
Stage 2 Workshops, November 2024
C&C Pre-Application Webinar, July 2024
Standard Indicator Webinars, April 2023
BCFs Case Studies Webinar, July 2022
Workshop Archive
Communications Toolkit
Learning and Evidence
Terms and Conditions
Frequently Asked Questions
Expert Groups Resources
About Us
About Us
Darwin Expert Committee
Contact
BCFs
BCFs
Darwin Initiative
IWTCF
Darwin Plus
BCFs
Home
Apply
Projects
News
Resources
About Us
Contact
Search
Search
Projects
Bacterial diversity in coastal seawater in Shandong Province, China
Key Facts
FUNDING SCHEME
Main Project
VALUE
£120,938
WHERE
China
Summary
To assist China in its work to maintain a balanced bacterial community in it marine and coastal environment
Status
Completed
Reference
81-70
Round
7
Start
01/04/1999
End
31/03/2002
Project Leader
Professor Brian Austin
Lead Organisation
Heriot-Watt University
Project Partners
Ocean University of Qingdao (OUQ), China
Website
http://www.cmbb.hw.ac.uk
Regions
East Asia
Countries
China
Project Outputs
Train OUQ staff for 3 weeks in the UK on isolation and identification of bacteria. Train 2+ Chinese students. Train 2 Chinese scientists in rapid identification techniques in the UK. Hold 5-day workshop for 10+ Chinese scientists. Produce 3 papers.
Documents:
Download:
Final Report
- 8-170 FR - 03/02/2021
Download:
Annual Report
- 8-170 AR2 - 07/04/2008
Project News
Monday, 15 June 2026
A fly farm revolution
An innovative approach to agriculture is enabling communities to build more climate-adaptive food systems while reducing pressure on biodiversity.
Read Article
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Locally led resilient rangelands
Across a Tanzanian landscape shaped by climate variability, investment in people and healthy ecosystems reduces vulnerability to climate shocks.
Read Article
Saturday, 13 June 2026
Climate adaptation for sea moss farming
Climate resilience is an integral component of farmer-informed guidance strengthening Saint Lucia’s sea moss sector.
Read Article