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Board of Advisors

Scientific, Technical, and Conservation Advisory Board

Dr. Deborah Brosnan
Eric Cheng
David Foreman
Dr. Birute Galdikas
Randy Hayes
Dr. Herbert Henrich
Dr. Jennifer Hopper
Captain Jet Johnson
Horst Kleinschmidt
Dr. Louise Leakey
Dr. Joe McGinniss
Dr. Godfrey Merlen
Dr. Roger Payne
Grant Pereira

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Dr. Deborah Brosnan

Founder and President of SEI, Dr. Brosnan is passionate about science and the oceans. She is a scientist on the front lines, as a strong advocate for the use of science in ecological decisions, and as a catalyst for scientists to participate in the global forum. She founded SEI as the conduit for scientists to outreach to all stakeholders and to help find science-based solutions to ecological problems. She believes strongly that scientists must fulfill a new social contract , and assume a greater leadership role in conservation and natural resource issues.

Born in Ireland, she grew up on the shores of the wild Atlantic coast where the tidepools and kelp forests were her playground and where she learned to dive. Always a trailblazer, as a young undergraduate she became the first woman ever to qualify as a scuba diver at the University.

She graduated with an honors degree from the National University of Galway Ireland, and went on to her Ph.D. with Jane Lubchenco and Bruce Menge at OSU. She holds professorships at Lewis and Clark College and Portland State. Author of scientific and popular articles, she is known for her work on the ecology and conservation of marine life.

Dr. Brosnan's own research and conservation range from tropical Caribbean where she directs a major SEI marine science program, to the Pacific shores of North America where she is involved in whale and coastal conservation. Her ground breaking research into human impacts on rocky shores was the backbone of the Oregon Territorial Sea Plan, and has been used to protect coasts worldwide.

Her adventurous spirit and love of science has taken her diving under active volcanoes to study how eruptions affect coral reefs and fisheries, and onto hostile seas in pursuit of greater understanding of the ocean. But she is equally at home bringing her message into the boardroom or the school room.

 

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Eric Cheng

Eric Cheng is the editor and publisher of Wetpixel.com, an online community for underwater photographers, and Wetpixel Quarterly, a print magazine featuring the best in underwater imagery. In both endeavors, Eric strives to provide a forum for photographers to share their work and discuss ocean-related issues, and in turn, educate viewers about the beauty and fragility of the marine ecosystem.

Caught between technical and creative worlds, Eric holds bachelors and masters degrees in computer science from Stanford University, where he also studied classical cello performance and developed a passion for photography.

Eric was a relative latecomer to the marine industry. He became a certified SCUBA diver in 1995 and took a camera underwater for the first time in 2001. Since then, he has become a widely-published, award-winning underwater photographer known worldwide for his passion as an educator. In 2003, Eric was awarded a prestigious Antibes Festival award for his work with Wetpixel.com, the Antibes underwater imaging web site of the year, and in 2005, he won a category in the prestigious Nature's Best Magazine photo competition, which has placed some of his work in the Smithsonian's Natural History Museum.

Through Wetpixel Expeditions, Eric leads regular photography expeditions and workshops around the world.

 

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Dave Foreman

Dave Foreman is a radical American environmentalist.  He is one of the founders of Earth First!, a group noted for consisting of ecological saboteurs, or ecoteurs.  To defend the environment, members of this group practice various destructive acts against both humans and machinery.

Foreman was born in 1947, the son of a United States Air Force employee.  As a young man, he was the chair of Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative organization; in the 1970s, he worked for the Wilderness Society.

Eventually, Foreman developed the idea that, while they are often well-meaning, government agencies, as well moderate private organizations, could not and would not stand up to the powerful forces attempting to destroying America's environment.

Inspired by Edward Abbey's book, The Monkey Wrench Gang, Foreman set about to from a group of radical environmentalists to engage in "monkey-wrenching," including such acts as "spiking" trees so that they could not be cut down, "munching" logging roads by the use of  nails, toppling high-voltage power lines, as well as other subversive practices that resulted in protecting the environment.

Thus Earth First! was born -- along with its motto: "No compromise in defense of Mother Earth."  This very unconventional organization operates without rules or officers.  As Foreman intended, it is simply a group of people who are passionate about the environment; along with ecotage, members use self-deprecating humor to mantain sanity and oppose fanaticism.

 

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Dr. Birute Galdikas

Biruté Galdikas was born in London, Germany, on May 10, 1946, while her parents were en route from Lithuania to Canada. She grew up in Toronto, Canada.

When Biruté was 12 years old she loved to go into the wilder sections of High Park in  Toronto. She would spend hours like this, quietly and secretly observing the wild animals in the park.

When she went to university, she combined her love of nature with her curiosity about the great apes and studied psychology and anthropology.

At 22, while she was working on her masters degree in anthropology at the University of California in Los Angeles, Biruté met Dr. Louis Leakey, who is famous for discovering fossils of early humans in Africa. Leakey and the National Geographic Society helped her to set up a research camp in Borneo to study orangutans.

Biruté arrived in Borneo with her husband, Rod Brindamour, in 1971. They had to live in primitive conditions. Within a few years, she gave birth to a son, Binty, who was raised among the orangutans and dubbed "the child of the rain forest". Biruté had to make difficult choices in the years that followed. She made the agonizing decision to remain in the rain forest when her marriage ended. Her son Binti returned to Canada with her ex-husband. Later she remarried and had two more children.

From March 1996 through the end of March 1998 under a special decree, Biruté served as a senior advisor to the Minister of Forestry on orangutan issues. In June 1997 she won the prestigious "Kalpataru" award, the highest award given by the Republic of Indonesia for outstanding environmental leadership and activity. Biruté Galdikas was the first person of non-Indonesian birth and one of the first women to be so recognized by the Indonesian government.

Biruté is uncompromising in her defense of wild orangutans and the preservation of tropical rain forests, which constitute the orangutan species' only natural habitat. She has always had grassroots support and the continued support of the Indonesian government, even in transition, in her pioneering research and effort to conserve and protect orangutans and rain forests as well as the support from numerous conservation groups around the world. Many of these organizations have honored Biruté with environmental awards.

Founder: Orangutan Foundation International

 

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Randy Hayes

Hayes, an award-winning documentary filmmaker, founded RAN in 1985 and, with bold direct action campaigns, built it into the primary American advocate not only for tropical rainforests, but also for its temperate cousins in places like the Pacific Northwest, British Columbia and Alaska. In its first year, RAN took on no less a target than the World Bank, fighting to reform its environmentally destructive loan practices.

When polite meetings wouldn't work, RAN staged civil disobedience actions, CEO confrontations and boycotts. San Franciscans soon got used to the sight of Hayes in handcuffs. The boycott list rapidly expanded, to include Burger King, Scott Paper, Conoco and Texaco.

"The environmental movement is full of reasonable people," says Hayes, making it clear that he is not one of them. Direct action works, he says, pointing to $2 billion in rainforest contracts in the Amazon and Indonesia that have been stopped through RAN's work.

After a decade of effective pressure on the lumber lobby, however, RAN is broadening its approach with a new campaign aimed at the Big Three corporate logging companies-Mitsubishi, MacMillan-Bloedel and Georgia-Pacific. Mitsubishi, hasn't yet mended its ways, but it was concerned enough about the boycott to arrange a meeting between Hayes and its CEO, Minouri Makihara.

RAN has also developed a practical, four-page 500-Year Plan that outlines how, over time, the world could, by international agreement, protect all remaining primary forests (providing economic compensation to the host countries), allow secondary forests to mature, and restrict sustainable logging to special commercial zones.

The plan encourages alternative fiber development, and advocates a reduction in wood and paper use by 7.5 percent a year. Hayes says the plan "gets us closer and closer to the root causes of the social and ecological crises at the end of the industrial era."

 

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Dr. Herbert Henrich

Dr. Herbert A.E. Henrich is a German economist engaged in the field of agro-inustrial development of eastern Africa, and much involved in animal welfare issues there.

He is acting as Sea Shepherd's representative in the effort to establish the first seal rescue and care center in South Africa.

 

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Dr. Jennifer Hopper

Dr. Hopper began her undergraduate studies by specializing in Zoology and Wildlife Biology and received her B.Sc. from the University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada in 1991. She continued her education and received her Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree in 1999. While attending university, Dr. Hopper was deeply involved with environmental enrichment programs for laboratory animals, specifically research dogs, and was honoured with the Roy S Moore Award for excellence in laboratory animal care and welfare. She remains steadfast in her belief that animal research should not be condoned but recognizes that it does continue and more effort is needed to improve the quality of research animal's lives.

Upon graduation Dr. Hopper worked at the London Ontario Veterinary Emergency Clinic and presently sits on their Board of Directors. She purchased a small animal hospital in 2001 where she is currently a single practitioner. She was the London Humane Society Board veterinarian for 2 years and currently sits on the London Veterinary Association Board. Dr. Hopper is heavily involved with a feral cat spay/neuter program and works with a local animal rescue group (Animal Outreach) on a daily basis.

Dr. Hopper's passion for animals has spanned the globe with many traveling excursions including a 3 month trip to Kenya and Tanzania. Back in London, Ontario she shares her home and heart with 5 dogs, numerous cats, 4 rabbits, 2 cockatiels, 3 rats and an elderly horse with attitude.

 

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Captain Jet Johnson

Al "Jet" Johnson was the founder of Greenpeace USA in 1975. Al joined Captain Paul Watson's Greenpeace seal campaign in 1975 and was Paul's deputy leader for the Greenpeace seal expeditions of 1976 and 1977.

Jet was one of Greenpeace's most colourful activists. Trained as a fighter pilot for the Royal Canadian Airforce, he later worked as a DC-10 Captain for American Airlines. Despite his status as a professional airline pilot, Jet courageously defended wildlife at both the risk to his life and his job security -- dropping parachutists into nuclear power plants, flying recon for Greenpeace seal and whale campaigns, and organizing the very first Greenpeace national office in San Francisco.

Jet was the first to support Captain Paul Watson when he left Greenpeace and founded the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, both financially and actively. Captain Johnson joined Captain Watson in 1978 in an investigation of elephant poaching in East Africa, running dangerously close to an encounter with Ugandan president Idi Amin and ducking poacher's bullets in Kenya.

Jet Johnson sailed on the first Sea Shepherd and was arrested on the Sea Shepherd II in 1983 for protecting baby harp seals. Over the years he has stood side by side with Captain Watson defending seals, whales, dolphins, and elephants.

Whenever Sea Shepherd has needed a pilot, Jet Johnson has been ready. In 1982, Captain Johnson flew Paul Watson and Carroll Vogel on a successful paint-bombing mission of a Soviet spy vessel off Washington State. The flight was a campaign against illegal Russian whaling activities.

Although retired from American Airlines, Jet still is active with Sea Shepherd and joined the crew to deliver the Ocean Warrior from Europe to North America.

Jet Johnson is without a doubt the world's foremost conservationist pilot. In addition to his legendary exploits with Greenpeace and Sea Shepherd, Jet flew Chief Paiukan's plane for the Kaiyapo nation in the rainforests of Brazil in 1990.

Jet Johnson is the father of three girls and the grandfather of one boy. He lives in British Columbia and is one of the most respected figures in the Canadian conservationist community.

 

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Horst Kleinschmidt

I have been an activist all my life. I fought against apartheid and for the rights and dignity of the oppressed people of my country. For this I went to jail and then into exile. Now that we have attained our freedom we have many other challenges. One of them is to make our society a kinder and more humane one. To that end we need to learn to live in harmony with our environment. The animal kingdom in South Africa has had a raw deal for hundreds of years. Many people now champion the cause of terrestrial animals. Having been an IWC Commissioner, the plight of the worlds whales became apparent to me. The terrible butchery of whaling was once part of this country too. Sea Shepherd alerts and educates people through its radical actions, which is why I decided to side with this organisation. 

 

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Dr. Louise Leakey

Louise Leakey, daughter of world-famous paleoanthropologists Richard and Meave Leakey and granddaughter of Louis and Mary Leakey, was born in Kenya. She represents the third generation of one of the world's most renowned scientific family dynasties.

Accompanying her famous father, Louise has spent much of her life in the Kenyan wilderness on both paleontology and wildlife expeditions, and was witness to the discovery of some of the most important human fossil finds as well as the critical protection of African wildlife.

She completed her Bachelor of Science degree in geology and biology at the University of Bristol, and her Ph.D. at University College London in paleoecology of African mammals. Louise upholds the Leakey family legacy in the search for human origins through continuing research with the Koobi Fora Research Project in the Turkana Basin of northern Kenya. In appreciation of her African field explorations on human origins, The National Geographic Society has made Louise an "Explorer-in Residence."

Currently, Louise is developing a long-term research initiative at Koobi Fora, East Turkana, where her concern for the welfare of the surrounding peoples has led her to generate increased funding for the local school and medical center. Among her other pursuits, Louise occasionally works as a guide for palaeontological excursions and horse riding safaris in Kenya. She manages the Leakey family vineyard, and is a Kenyan bush pilot. An avid photographer, she recently published some of her photos in the book Africa's Children as part of a charitable project for education. Louise lives in Kenya with her two young daughters and her husband, Emmanuel de Merode, who is the Chief Executive of Wildlife Direct, the African Conservation Fund.

 

Dr. Godfrey Merlen

Biography to come

 

 

 

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Dr. Roger Payne

Dr. Roger Payne is best known for his discovery (with Scott McVay) that humpback whales sing songs, and for his theory that the sounds of fin and blue whales can be heard across oceans. He has studied the behavior of whales since 1967 and is founder and President of the Whale Conservation Institute/Ocean Alliance. His BA degree is from Harvard University, and his Ph.D. from Cornell.

He has led over 100 expeditions to all oceans and studied every species of large whale in the wild. He pioneered many of the benign research techniques now used throughout the world to study free-swimming whales, and has trained many of the current leaders in whale research, both in America and abroad. He directs long term research projects on the songs of Humpback whales, and on the behavior of 1300 individually known Argentine right whales the longest such continuous study.

Payne publishes technical articles and writes for general audiences. One of his three articles in National Geographic Magazine contained a record of whale sounds for which 10.5 million copies were printed still the largest single print order in the history of the recording industry. His publications include the book, "Among Whales" (1995) and three recordings: "Songs of the Humpback Whale" (1970 the best selling natural history recording ever released), "Deep Voices", (1975), and (with Musician Paul Winter) "Whales Alive", (1989 compositions composed by whales but arranged and played by humans). Payne has lectured at most major universities in the U.S. and England, and has appeared on most major TV and radio talk shows. He is a writer and presenter for television documentaries, and co-writer and co-director of the IMAX film "Whales" a co-production of The National Wildlife Federation, Destination Cinema, and Zephyr Productions (Payne's company). Much of the material in this film is based on Payne's research.

Payne's honors and awards, include: a knighthood in the Netherlands, a MacArthur Fellowship (a $325,000 prize) the similar Lyndhurst Prize Fellowship ($120,000), the Joseph Wood Krutch Medal of the Humane Society of the U.S., The Albert Schweitzer Medal of the Animal Welfare Institute, and a United Nations, UNEP, "Global 500" Award. His films have received seven awards including two Emmy nominations and an Emmy for best interview.

 

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Grant Pereira

Grant has been involved in conservation work for more than 30 years, and lives by the philosophy of "getting his feet wet and hands dirty." In Singapore, he has an ongoing program to replant mangroves at coastal shores to encourage the return of native fauna and flora.

Grant has been very active in the anti-sharkfin campaign, heading up a marketing and educational campaign to stop the brutal slaughter of sharks for their fins. He has created, marketed and widely distributed postcards and posters which illustrate the devastation of the shark-finning practice, the dolphin slaughter in Japan and captive dolphin shows in Asia.

In 2000, Grant was awarded the Greenleaf Award, which is the highest environmental award given to an individual in Singapore.

Presently, Grant is the head of the Green Volunteers Network of the Singapore Environment Council, which is the most active environmental organization in Singapore.

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