Our Scientific Advisory Committee taps into a wide pool of
expertise. Its members include:
Dr. David E. Guggenheim
is president of the recently-formed nonprofit organization, 1
Planet 1 Ocean, dedicated to building international partnerships
for marine conservation. He is also an independent consultant in
conservation policy and science, based in Washington, DC. For the
Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies, Guggenheim is
currently leading the first-ever comprehensive research and
conservation program in Cuba's Gulf of Mexico region. He is also
working with Aquaculture Developments, LLC to introduce cutting
edge technologies for sustainable aquaculture practices to the
Americas in order to reduce pressure on overfished wild fish
stocks.
Milton Love is a
Research Biologist at the Marine Science Institute, University of
California, Santa Barbara. He has conducted research on the biology
and ecology of marine fishes for the past 40 years.
Stephen Cairns is a
research scientist and curator at the National Museum of Natural
History, Smithsonian, where he is responsible for the national
collections of Cnidaria. He has published 110 papers on the
systematics, zoogeography, biodiversity, and mineralogy of
deep-water Scleractinia, Stylasteridae, and Octocorallia. He has
described over 350 new species and 40 new genera of deep-water
Cnidaria from throughout the world, including the North Pacific.
He has participated in submersible expeditions in the Galapagos, NW
Hawaiian Islands, northern Gulf of Mexico, and off South
Carolina.
George I. Matsumoto is the Senior
Education and Research Specialist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium
Research Institute. He is interested in any type of gelatinous
creature and is dedicated towards enhancing public awareness of the
ocean and the issues that are of high importance.
Peter Etnoyer is a Graduate
Research Associate at Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi.
His dissertation research examines deep water gorgonian (sea fan)
distributions using geographic information systems (GIS) to
correlate gorgonian abundance to environmental conditions. He is
also the co-editor for the Deep Sea News at
Seed Magazine's ScienceBlogs.
Peter is familiar with some of the benthic invertebrate species
this expedition will encounter, because he took part in the Gulf of
Alaska Seamount Expeditions in 2002 and 2004, diving six different
seamounts with the Alvin submersible down to 2700m. He expects that
the Deep Worker divers will encounter many large gorgonians,
possibly even a new species of bamboo coral called Isidella that
grows up to 2m tall. New samples, photos, and videos from this
expedition could help in the species' description.
Charles G Messing (Nova
Southeastern University) received his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from
the University of Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and
Atmospheric Science, where he accompanied several deep-sea trawling
expeditions around the Bahamas, Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific.
He specializes on the systematics, ecology and biogeography of
living crinoids but also works on the ecology of deep-water coral
reefs and other hard-substrate assemblages. He has been using
submersibles such as Alvin and Johnson Sea Link to investigate
deep-water habitats since 1975.
Dr. Paul Johnston, a marine and
freshwater biologist, obtained his BSc and PhD from London
University. He has managed the Greenpeace Research Laboratories,
located at the University of Exeter, since 1986 and has published
extensively on marine management and protection.
Andrew Malavansky is an Unungan
born in 1964 and on St. George Island, Alaska, on a mix of western
and traditional subsistence lifestyle. Andy fished in the local
small boat fishery as well as on larger commercial ships in the
Bering Sea and North Pacific. He currently works for the St. George
tribal government as Co-Director in the newly formed Kayumixtax
Eco-office and serves as vice-president on the tribal council and
as a director of the local village corporation.
Greg Rouse is the
curator of the Benthic Invertebrate Collection at the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography. His research interests include
phylogeny and systematics of marine animals particularly annelids
and echinoderms , evolution of life history strategies in marine
animals, and whalefall and hydrothermal vent fauna.
Daniel Jones is a
research scientist at the National Oceanography Centre in
Southampton, U.K. He currently coordinates the SERPENT
project and specializes in deep-water megabenthic ecology. He has
used a large variety of imaging systems for ecological assessment,
particularly in high-latitude waters.
Bob Stone is a NOAA
Fisheries research biologist stationed at the Auke Bay Laboratories
in Juneau, Alaska. He has studied seafloor and deep-sea ecology in
Alaska during the past 22 years and has made more than 2000 scuba
dives and 100 submersible dives during that period. Recent
projects include studying red tree coral communities in the eastern
Gulf of Alaska and Southeast Alaska glacial fjords and Aleutian
Island coral and sponge gardens.
Lance Morgan is the Vice
President of the Marine Conservation Biology Institute. Dr. Morgan
received his Ph.D. in Ecology from the University of
California-Davis, and did postdoctoral research at Bodega Marine
Laboratory and NOAA Fisheries. He worked at The Marine Mammal
Center in Sausalito, CA as Science Director and Marine Mammalogist,
and studied seal and sea lion behavior and evolution. Lance has led
MCBI's effort to identify priority conservation areas from Baja
California to the Bering Sea for the Commission for Environmental
Cooperation, and authored the influential Shifting Gears study
which focused on collateral damage from commercial fishing.
More recently he authored the first assessment of deep sea
corals in US waters, and has published a number of papers on this
topic. He is currently the Conservation Chair of the Cordell Bank
Sanctuary Advisory Council.
Michelle Ridgway is an ecological consultant with
Oceanus Alaska, and a member of the Advisory Panel of the North
Pacific Fishery Managment Council.
Alan Springer
is a professor of biological oceanography at the University of
Alaska - Fairbanks. Dr. Springer's research interests concern
matters of scale in time and space of large marine ecosystems and
of variability in production at various trophic levels.
Jon Warrenchuk
is the Marine Conservation Coordinator for Oceana, in their Juneau
office.