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Charles Littnan | |
---|---|
Education | Bachelors in Marine Biology at Texas A&M University at Galveston PhD in Environmental Sciences at Macquarie University |
Occupation | Conservation biologist |
Employer | National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) |
Website | https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/contact/charles-littnan-phd |
Charles Littnan is an American conservation biologist. He is the divisional director at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in Hawaii. He works in the Protected Species Division and is the lead scientist in the Hawaiian Monk Seal Research Program. [1]
Charles Littnan received his Bachelor's degree in Marine Biology from Texas A&M University at Galveston and then went on to get his PhD in Environmental Sciences from Macquarie University in Australia. [2] While getting his PhD in 2004, his thesis focused on the fisheries interactions of Australian fur seals in the eastern Victorian shelf waters. [3]
Littnan is a conservation biologist who studies marine mammal ecology, endangered species, climate change, and science communication. His primary work focuses on the conservation and ecology of the endangered Hawaiian monk seals. He has spent more than 15 years researching Hawaiian monk seals. He has published over 52 peer reviewed articles, in addition to being featured in three books. [4]
Littnan is also president of the Society for Marine Mammalogy, organizing conferences to discuss conservation and management initiatives with other researchers. [5]
In May 2017, Littnan spoke at the National Marine Sanctuaries Webinar Series on the topic titled Forty Years of Conserving Hawai'i's Native Seal. He presented on the monk seal species' threats and how a study became the world's most proactive marine mammal recovery program. [6] More recently, he gave a presentation at the 2022 Graduate Science Research symposium at Nova Southeastern University in Florida. He addressed the effects of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) on Hawaiian monk seals and their specific species of prey in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands. [7]
In 2008, Littnan and a team of researchers conducted a study on a three month old female monk seal located in Penguin Bank; a submerged shield volcano that stems off the Hawaiian Island of Molokai. The point of this study was to document the geographic and vertical movements of the seal as well as her foraging behavior. Through this study Littnan and the team of researchers were able to gain valuable information on the lengths and locations of the monk seals foraging trips. They were also able to learn more about the habits of one of the United States most endangered animals. [8]
In 2014, Charles Littnan conducted research in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands using the Puma Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) to survey the monk seals in the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument. [9] Littnan and a team of researchers investigated the foraging behavior of Hawaiian monk seals. Throughout 2012–2014, he and his team used accelerometers, seal-mounted cameras, and GPS tags on six monk seals to study their foraging dives on Molokai, Kauai, and Oahu. [10] With the results of their data, they were able to identify environmental factors that affected when and how the seals were conducting their foraging dives. [1]
In 2017, Littnan published Bio-Ecology, Threats and Conservation, [11] a chapter in the book Tropical Pinnipeds, where he discussed regulatory requirements for monk seal conservation, the key sources of seal disease in the Hawaiian Archipelago, and managers' and scientists' prior conservation efforts to eliminate these threats and guarantee the future survival of the species. [12]
Littnan also contributed to a chapter on the ethics of studying marine animals in the book Marine Mammal Ecology and Conservation. He contributed research methods on how to investigate marine life in an ethical manner. [13]
In 2020, Littnan and a group of researchers set out to examine the causes of death in Hawaiian Monk Seals. They focused on inferred deaths that were believed to have occurred from 2004 to 2019 . Through their work they were able to find that the most common causes of death were anthropogenic trauma, anthropogenic drowning, and protozoal disease. Overall, they were able to discover that anthropogenic causes had the largest effect on the growth rate of the Hawaiian Monk Seals population. [14]
In 2020, Littnan published two articles focusing on the population rate of the Hawaiian monk seals. Using public sighting reports, he and others investigated the reproductive rates of female Hawaiian monk seals in the Main Hawaiian Islands in one article. [15] In the other article, he discussed the various causes of mortality in Hawaiian monk seals as well as the resulting population effects. [16]
He was recognized in the Project Hall of Fame for his effort in conservation to the Hawaiian monk seals. [17]
The Steller sea lion, also known as Steller's sea lion or the northern sea lion, is a large, near-threatened species of sea lion, predominantly found in the coastal marine habitats of the northeast Pacific Ocean and the Pacific Northwest regions of North America, from north-central California to Oregon, Washington and British Columbia to Alaska. Its range continues across the Northern Pacific and the Aleutian Islands, all the way to Kamchatka, Magadan Oblast, and the Sea of Okhotsk, south to Honshu's northern coastline. It is the sole member of the genus Eumetopias, and the largest of the so-called eared seals (Otariidae). Among pinnipeds, only the walrus and the two species of elephant seal are bigger. The species is named for the naturalist and explorer Georg Wilhelm Steller, who first described them in 1741. Steller sea lions have attracted considerable attention in recent decades, both from scientists and the general public, due to significant declines in their numbers over an extensive portion of their northern range, notably in Alaska.
The short-finned pilot whale is one of the two species of cetaceans in the genus Globicephala, which it shares with the long-finned pilot whale. It is part of the oceanic dolphin family (Delphinidae).
The grey seal is a large seal of the family Phocidae, which are commonly referred to as "true seals" or "earless seals". The only species classified in the genus Halichoerus, it is found on both shores of the North Atlantic Ocean. In Latin, Halichoerus grypus means "hook-nosed sea pig". Its name is spelled gray seal in the United States; it is also known as Atlantic seal and the horsehead seal.
The false killer whale is a species of oceanic dolphin that is the only extant representative of the genus Pseudorca. It is found in oceans worldwide but mainly in tropical regions. It was first described in 1846 as a species of porpoise based on a skull, which was revised when the first carcasses were observed in 1861. The name "false killer whale" comes from having a skull similar to the orca, or killer whale.
The northern right whale dolphin is a small, slender species of cetacean found in the cold and temperate waters of the North Pacific Ocean. Lacking a dorsal fin, and appearing superficially porpoise-like, it is one of the two species of right whale dolphin.
The Atlantic white-sided dolphin is a distinctively coloured dolphin found in the cool to temperate waters of the North Atlantic Ocean.
The Pearl and Hermes Atoll, also known as Pearl and Hermes Reef, is part of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, a group of small islands and atolls that form the farthest northwest portion of the Hawaiian island chain. The atoll consists of a variable number of flat and sandy islets, typically between five and seven. More were noted in historical sources but have since been lost to erosion and rising sea levels.
The Hawaiian monk seal is an endangered species of earless seal in the family Phocidae that is endemic to the Hawaiian Islands.
Monk seals are earless seals of the tribe Monachini. They are the only earless seals found in tropical climates. The two genera of monk seals, Monachus and Neomonachus, comprise three species: the Mediterranean monk seal, Monachus monachus; the Hawaiian monk seal, Neomonachus schauinslandi; and the Caribbean monk seal, Neomonachus tropicalis, which became extinct in the 20th century. The two surviving species are now rare and in imminent danger of extinction. All three monk seal species were classified in genus Monachus until 2014, when the Caribbean and Hawaiian species were placed into a new genus, Neomonachus.
The Caribbean monk seal, also known as the West Indian seal or sea wolf, is an extinct species of seal native to the Caribbean. The main natural predators of Caribbean monk seals were large sharks, such as great whites and tiger sharks, and possibly transient orcas ; however, humans would become their most lethal enemy. Overhunting of the monk seals for oil and meat, as well as overfishing of their natural prey, are the likely reasons for the seals' extinction.
The Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) was the first act of the United States Congress to call specifically for an ecosystem approach to wildlife management.
The Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument (PMNM) is a World Heritage listed U.S. National Monument encompassing 583,000 square miles (1,510,000 km2) of ocean waters, including ten islands and atolls of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. It was created in June 2006 with 140,000 square miles (360,000 km2) and expanded in August 2016 by moving its border to the limit of the exclusive economic zone, making it one of the world's largest protected areas. It is internationally known for its cultural and natural values as follows:
The area has deep cosmological and traditional significance for living Native Hawaiian culture, as an ancestral environment, as an embodiment of the Hawaiian concept of kinship between people and the natural world, and as the place where it is believed that life originates and to where the spirits return after death. On two of the islands, Nihoa and Mokumanamana, there are archaeological remains relating to pre-European settlement and use. Much of the monument is made up of pelagic and deepwater habitats, with notable features such as seamounts and submerged banks, extensive coral reefs and lagoons.
Ian Grote Stirling was a research scientist with Environment and Climate Change Canada and an adjunct professor in the University of Alberta Department of Biological Sciences. His research has focused mostly on Arctic and Antarctic zoology and ecology, and he was one of the world's top authorities on polar bears.
Bernd Gerhard Würsig is an educator and researcher who works mainly on aspects of behavior and behavioral ecology of whales and dolphins. Much of his early work was done in close collaboration with his wife Melany Ann Würsig, and they have published numerous manuscripts and books together. He is now Professor Emeritus at Texas A&M University, teaching only occasionally but still involved with graduate student and other research. He is especially active with problems and potential solutions concerning Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins, Sousa chinensis, in and surrounding waters of Hong Kong.
The marine policy of the Barack Obama administration comprises several significant environmental policy decisions for the oceans made during his two terms in office from 2009 to 2017. By executive action, US President Barack Obama increased fourfold the amount of protected marine space in waters under United States control, setting a major precedent for global ocean conservation. Using the U.S. president's authority under the Antiquities Act of 1906, he expanded to 200 nautical miles the seaward limits of Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument in Hawaiʻi and the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument around the U.S. island possessions in the Central Pacific. In the Atlantic, Obama created the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument, the first marine monument in the U.S. exclusive economic zone (EEZ) in the Atlantic.
Claire Simeone is a veterinarian, advocate for ocean health, and founder at Sea Change Health. She is a 2018 TED Fellow, the first ever veterinarian to be selected.
A narluga is a hybrid born from mating a female narwhal and a male beluga whale. Narwhals and beluga whales are both cetaceans found in the High Arctic and are the only two living members of the family Monodontidae.
Dr. Amanda Bradford is a marine mammal biologist who is currently researching cetacean population dynamics for the National Marine Fisheries Service of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Bradford is currently a Research Ecologist with the Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center's Cetacean Research Program. Her research primarily focuses on assessing populations of cetaceans, including evaluating population size, health, and impacts of human-caused threats, such as fisheries interactions. Bradford is a cofounder and organizer of the Women in Marine Mammal Science (WIMMS) Initiative.
Orcas or killer whales have a cosmopolitan distribution and several distinct populations or types have been documented or suggested. Three to five types of orcas may be distinct enough to be considered different races, subspecies, or possibly even species. The IUCN reported in 2008, "The taxonomy of this genus is clearly in need of review, and it is likely that O. orca will be split into a number of different species or at least subspecies over the next few years." Although large variation in the ecological distinctiveness of different orca groups complicate simple differentiation into types. Mammal-eating orcas in different regions were long thought likely to be closely related, but genetic testing has refuted this hypothesis.
Randall Kosaki is a research ecologist at the NOAA Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument. His expertise is in the behavioral ecology, taxonomy, and biogeography of Pacific coral reef fishes.
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