News Release
New Marine Mammal Center Formed at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
The multi-disciplinary center will focus on research and conservation
The Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution (WHOI) has announced the formation of a new center for
marine mammal research and conservation studies. The center combines
scientific expertise, state-of-the-art facilities, and technological
innovations to address both basic questions about marine mammal
behavior, physiology and health as well as potential effects of human
activities on marine mammals and the ecosystems on which they depend.
At its core, the Marine Mammal Center (MMC) is a diverse group of
scientists and engineers who employ sophisticated technologies at sea
and in the laboratory. These include laboratories for development of
non-invasive devices for data collection, remotely operated observation
platforms, and a unique in-house facility that combines a Computerized
Tomography (CT) scanner with specially designed animal handling
equipment, necropsy space, freezers, and chillers for state of the art
diagnostic analyses. The MMC combines scientific expertise with novel
applications of technologies and tools such as gliders, sound
propagation models, and biomedical and habitat visualizations.
The projects conducted at WHOI involve challenging issues that affect
many parts of our society, including disease transmission between
humans and marine animals, the impacts of climate change on marine
populations, particularly the polar bear, methods to decrease
entanglements of whales in fishing gear, and how to reduce the effects
on marine mammals from sonar, ship strikes, and construction and
exploration activities along our coasts and at sea.
“There has been such an expansion of conservation-related work at WHOI
and work that can inform important policy decisions,” said Marine
Mammal Center Director Peter Tyack, a senior scientist in the WHOI
Biology Department. “Our goals for the MMC include helping our
researchers to share data and develop new programs, and to make it
easier for scientists to interact with other organizations and decision
makers.”
Cross-institutional programs are already being developed with
colleagues at Duke University, National Marine Life Center, Cape Cod
Stranding Network (a project of the International Fund for Animal
Welfare), and the New England Aquarium that are consistent with the
MMC’s goal of improving our understanding of the animals and assisting
their survival.
A recent example of how the MMC collaborations can have a significant
effect is an unprecedented survey of 33 species of whales, dolphins,
seals, porpoises, sharks, and seabirds on the U.S. East Coast that
revealed a wide variety of disease-causing microbes — including many
that have developed resistance to antibiotics and several that can be
transmitted to humans — in marine wildlife. The research, published in
August 2008, would not have been possible without multi-organization
collaborations involving WHOI researchers, stranding networks, and
fisheries managers that allowed samples from stranded and entrapped
marine mammals to be analyzed at the WHOI necropsy facility. The newly
established Marine Mammal Center will act as an umbrella for even more
extensive collaborations that will enhance and expand such productive
efforts.
In addition to fostering research and interdisciplinary collaborations,
the MMC will act as a clearinghouse for science in the service of
marine mammal conservation, and will support the education and training
of the next generation of marine mammal scientists.
A gift from Pete and Ginny Nicholas and family catalyzed the MMC’s
formation. Under the MMC’s auspices, researchers can develop
collaborative proposals to be submitted to a broad range of government,
industry, and private funders — a scenario that is important to
ensuring the independence of the research and a focus on the most
pressing questions.
“Society’s ignorance about the impact of threats like chemical or noise
pollution makes it nearly impossible to manage the effects of human
activities on the ocean environment,” said WHOI Director and President
Susan Avery. “The new Marine Mammal Center brings the best science and
technology to bear on understanding the threats and developing
innovative conservation solutions.”
The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution is a private, independent
organization in Falmouth, Mass., dedicated to marine research,
engineering, and higher education. Established in 1930 on a
recommendation from the National Academy of Sciences, its primary
mission is to understand the oceans and their interaction with the
Earth as a whole, and to communicate a basic understanding of the
oceans’ role in the changing global environment.
Originally published: September 18, 2008

