About
I
grew up in Northern California, raised by a nurse practitioner and a
landscape architect that instilled in me both a fascination for science
and a love of nature at an early age. I have loved marine mammals since
my first trips to the coast. I had little interest
in captive animals beyond the excitement of seeing dolphins and killer
whales up close; it was the way those marine mammals worked in their
natural habitats that made me wonder and inspired me to ask questions.
I
never thought I would work with whales, but I have become particularly
fascinated humpback whales because they are so unique among normally
solitary baleen whales. Baleen whales are nothing like
other cetaceans--they don't form matrilineal groups, cliques, or
male-male pairs like some dolphins and killer whales. Yet humpbacks have
learned to work together despite their relatively solitary nature to
exploit their prey and master their environment. If you think about it,
bubble-net feeding is an incredible behavior. Somehow these whales
learned to blow bubbles not just
for exhalation but to manipulate their prey. And then they learned to
coordinate that behavior so that more whales could benefit. I began this
research on group foraging in humpback whales as an undergraduate and
for every new thing I learn, more research questions pop up. I am so
amazed by these whales and inspired by their behaviors that I am
planning on pursuing a PhD to research social learning and foraging in
humpbacks.
Joined
January 2016