What did you accomplish with your host organization? What was the impact of your work?
Throughout my time at the International Marine Mammal Project (IMMP), I worked on two separate projects: vessel strike prevention of the North Atlantic right whale (NARW) and researching cases of marine plastic pollution ingestion of marine mammals in California.
IMMP found interest in developing a campaign to protect the critically endangered NARW from further loss, specifically from vessel strikes in Maine and off the U.S. East Coast. The team was intrigued by potential partnership opportunities with Whale Safe -a program of the Benioff Ocean Science Laboratory at UC Santa Barbara-, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, both of which work towards preventing vessel strikes in the U.S. In order to identify which actors were most suitable partners and how IMMP could become involved, I was tasked with developing a full analysis of the Whale Safe program and presenting my findings. This task allowed both myself and the organization to better understand the problem at hand, who is working towards a solution, the technology behind the Whale Safe program, and to create recommendations on how to move forward. Ultimately, we decided that a consumer-driven campaign against the shipping companies that are non-compliant with the vessel speed reductions was the best move.
I also had the opportunity to attend the first Enhancing Collaboration to Prevent Vessel Strikes in California workshop hosted by The Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito. This workshop brought together marine scientists, data analysts, shipping representatives, tech innovators, and policymakers from around the U.S. to develop a solution to the increasing number of vessel strikes in California and around the world. Following the workshop, I wrote a blog post detailing the new technologies, data findings, and potential opportunities that were discussed among the group. You can read the blog post here.

IMMP was also very interested to discover cases of plastic ingestion in marine mammals to support a lawsuit against major plastic companies in California. I began this project by creating a master list of all the stranding centers throughout the U.S. and contacting the California centers requesting data on marine plastic ingestion. Surprisingly, most stranding centers didn’t have data on plastic ingestion in marine mammals (very fortunate for the animals but unfortunate for my research). This doesn’t mean that there aren’t marine mammals ingesting plastic-it simply means that there hasn’t been much ingestion discovered in the necropsies of stranded marine mammals. There are many cases, however, in which microplastics have been found in marine mammal necropsies-still proving that marine mammals are being negatively impacted by plastic pollution.
Describe the benefits of this experience for you professionally and personally?
Professionally, I found both projects were exceptionally beneficial to my knowledge of marine mammal conservation. Doing a deep dive into the Whale Safe program allowed me to really understand the technology utilized in whale detection which I was fairly unaware of prior to this work. It was also incredibly helpful and interesting to learn all about the new software utilizing AI to detect whales, as it is becoming a major source of data collection. While I wasn’t able to find any specific cases that documented marine plastic ingestion in marine mammals (in California), this task was very beneficial to me as it greatly improved my knowledge on stranding networks and the response process, necropsy data and collection, and how plastic pollution impacts marine life.
Personally, working with IMMP was really full-circle for me. IMMP was one of the organizations that created the movie, The Cove, which is the reason I decided to go into marine conservation in the first place. Being able to work for an organization that does such great work against captivity and atrocities like the Taiji Dolphin Drive was incredibly fulfilling and I just felt honored to be a part of it.
Did your experience provide any unexpected discovery, self-reflection, or epiphany?
My experience definitely provided an unexpected interest in law. Getting to work on the plastic pollution case and trying to find ingestion examples to use against these enormous plastic companies made my work feel very real and important. I was really lucky to have a supervisor that was interested in my professional development outside of my projects. He set up meetings with the lawyers at Earth Island Institute so I can get a more in-depth understanding of what they do and ask advice, which I really appreciated. Next stop might be law school (wish me luck)!