Wild Caribbean is dedicated to celebrating and protecting the extraordinary natural and cultural heritage of the Caribbean region, especially The Bahamas, the Greater and Lesser Antilles, the Yucatán, and Caribbean Central America, to the Guianas (South America).
Through this site, we showcase the landscapes, flora and fauna, forests and woodlands, shores and waters, and the living traditions that define the Caribbean experience. Our work highlights not only the region’s remarkable biodiversity and marine environments, but also the people and communities who cherish and sustain these places. By presenting these interconnected elements in a clear and accessible way, we aim to deepen appreciation for the Caribbean’s unique character and ecological richness.
By documenting and sharing these environments and stories, we seek to inspire conservation, strengthen regional identity, and help ensure that the Caribbean’s wild places and species endure for generations to come.
About Kevel Lindsay
Kevel Lindsay is an author, forester, ecologist, and Caribbean biodiversity expert.
Born and raised in Antigua, Mr. Lindsay has a degree in environmental biology from Columbia University and an associate degree in forestry from the Eastern Caribbean Institute of Agriculture and Forestry (ECIAF) in Trinidad (now University of Trinidad and Tobago).
He is a regional expert on Caribbean biodiversity (flora and fauna), ecology, watershed management, environmental systems, organizational management and planning, community development and development planning. He has over 34 years of experience in natural resources conservation, environmental and ecological surveys, protected areas issues and management, field surveys and research, archival and document research, literature reviews, resource profiling, characterisation, and reporting, having worked on protected areas planning and writing management plans, in watershed, terrestrial and coastal issues on Antigua, Barbuda, St. Kitts, Nevis, the US Virgin Islands, the British Virgin Islands, Grenada and across the wider Caribbean and North America.
