Catherine J. Carroll
C.J. Carroll is a graduate student at Savannah State University working on a Master of
Science in Marine Sciences and is also interning at Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary. C.J.'s thesis
project is using the acoustic project data to determine the resident times of snapper and grouper species inside of
Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary. She graduated from the University of West Florida in Pensacola, Fla
in 2008 with a Bachelors of Science in Marine Biology. Her undergraduate work consisted of studying organisms in central and
south Florida, as a part of the efforts to restore and conserve the Florida Everglades. She has been a certified SCUBA diver
since 1999, and is now a NOAA scientific diver.
Devin Dumont
Devin Dumont with being inspired by his parents, family beach days, fishing trips, and Jacques Cousteau film documentaries, he has always been fascinated by the ocean and its wonders. His interests led him to earn a Bachelor of Science in Marine Biology from the College of Charleston. After earning several SCUBA certifications, he gained experience as an environmental educator at the University of Georgia Cooperative Extension-Burton 4-H Center on Tybee Island, Ga where he taught groups of people about coastal ecosystems and wildlife found along the southeastern US. Eager to learn research skills for fisheries management and conservation, he enrolled in a graduate program at Savannah State University where he will achieve a Master of Science in Marine Science in December of 2009. he was very fortunate to have conducted shark research with Dr. Carolyn Belcher of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources-Coastal Resource Division for his master’s thesis. While attending Savannah State, he began volunteering at the University of Georgia Marine Extension Service - Marine Education Center and Aquarium, which is how he sought the opportunity to become Curator of the aquarium in December of 2008.
Sarah Fangman
Sarah Fangman is the Co-Chief Scientist on this research effort, and as such is responsible for the project's overall success. She is the Associate Science Coordinator for the Southeast Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Region and works out of the Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary headquarters. Originally from Minneapolis, Minn, Sarah moved to Vermont to complete her Bachelors of Science in Environmental Studies and Biology at Middlebury College. She completed her Master of Science in Marine Affairs at the University of Washington in Seattle, Wash. During the completion of her Masters, Sarah had an internship with NOAA and then was awarded a place in NOAA’s Presidential Management Fellowship Program. She has worked with NOAA ever since. She is also a NOAA Advanced Working Diver and Divemaster, and has been a certified diver since college.
Donna Franco
Dawn Franco earned a B.S. in Biology in 2002 from Old Dominion University in Norfolk VA. She worked as a Lab Technician, in the Age and Growth Lab, for the Center for Quantitative Fisheries Ecology in Norfolk, VA from 2002 to 2004. She is currently working with the Marine Recreational Information Program (MRIP) for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Coastal Resources Division. She hopes to further her education by pursuing a Masters Degree, focusing on fisheries science, in the near future.
Patrick Geer
Patrick Geer is the Research and Survey Program Supervisor of Georgia Department of Natural Resources’ Coastal Resources Division. He received his B.S. in Biology from the State University of New York at Oswego and his M.S. in Biological Oceanography from Old Dominion University. He’s worked at CRD since 2002 supervising many of the fishery independent and dependent surveys and projects. Prior to joining CRD, he spent 14 years at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, College of William and Mary as principal investigator of their juvenile monitoring surveys.
Jeff Hart
Jeff Hart joined the Team Ocean group at its inception in 2008. Originally a native of Cleveland, Ohio, Jeff moved to Savannah, GA in 2005 from Oklahoma City, OK, where he received his original dive training in the lakes of Oklahoma and Texas. Prior to Team Ocean, Jeff worked as a volunteer diver at the South Carolina Aquarium in Charleston, SC. He currently works in the aerospace industry as a Flight Dispatcher.
Matt Hinman
Matt Hinman is currently working for Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Coastal Resources Division, as a long-line technician. This is Matt’s third year working on this project and he enjoys every minute of it. Matt reports that he is amazed every time he ventures offshore at the incredible things that are out there. Matt will never a pass up an opportunity to drop a hook in the water!
Matt Kendall
Dr. Matt Kendall is a Marine Biologist at the NOAA Biogeography Branch in Silver Spring, Md. His research seeks to quantify the links among organisms and their habitats at multiple spatial scales. He studies habitat features through in situ and landscape scale data to create spatial and thematic maps. These maps are further used on ecological studies, such as the acoustic project, to advise spatial management tools. Dr. Kendall received his Ph.D. from the University of Maryland and has worked for NOAA since 1999.
Donna McDowell
Donna McDowell is a level two Marine Technician at the Georgia Department of Natural Resources within the Coastal Resources Division. Since 2001, she has worked creel surveys, carcass recovery, and gill and trammel net surveys. Donna's main duties include the management of the cooperative tagging program, lead technician on two longline projects investigating abundance of shark species and adult red drum in Georgia waters, collecting large trout otoliths from local fish tournaments on weekends, and during her down time, which is only three to four months from January through March, conducts fish ageing in the lab. She is also a certified scuba diver with many dives on the wrecks and reefs along Georgia and Florida and has participated in buoy maintenance and deployment. Donna completed her B.S. in Marine Science from Savannah State University in 2002 and is currently working on her Masters at SSU. Her thesis project will focus on one of Georgia’s most important recreational finfish, the southern kingfish or “whiting” as it is known locally. She has a passion and appreciation for the outdoors.
Greg McFall
Greg McFall is the Co-Chief Scientist for this cruise and Research Coordinator for Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary and as such, will be able to use the information from the tagging project to help answer management related questions pertaining to fishery resources. Greg offers a lifetime of extensive diving experience, as well as wealth of knowledge about marine ecology. Greg has a bachelor's degree in Biology from West Virginia University, and received his Masters of Marine Biology from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. Prior to working with the Office of National Marine Sactuaries, Greg worked with the UNCW team at the National Undersea Research Center and with the Chemical Ecology laboratory.
Chad Meckley
LTJG Chad M. Meckley is a NOAA Corps Officer currently assigned to Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary as the Vessel Operations Coordinator. He joined the NOAA Corps in 2006 and, prior to his assignment at Gray's Reef, he was the Navigation Officer and an Officer of the Deck aboard the NOAA Ship ALBATROSS IV out of Woods Hole, Mass. Chad is a certified NOAA working diver, dive master, and medical person in charge. He hails from Reading, Pa. and received his Bachelors of Science degree in Geo/Environmental Studies from Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania. Chad is excited to be part of the Office of National Marine Sanctuaries and is looking forward to this and future expeditions.
Mark Monoco
Dr. Mark Monaco is a marine biologist and has been the Chief of NOAA's Biogeography Branch in Silver Spring, MD for the past 15 years and has worked for NOAA since 1984. He manages a staff of 30 combined federal and contract employees that focus on mapping of marine habitats, understanding the ecology of living marine resources, and defining species' habitat affinities. His current research interests are on the defining and evaluating the efficacy of marine protected areas (MPAs). His Branch is currently leading MPA research and monitoring studies in US temperate waters and tropical coral reef ecosystems in the Caribbean and Pacific islands. His role on the GRNMS Nancy Foster 2008 mission is to assist the team of scientists conducting acoustic tracking of groupers and snappers to determine the movement of the fishes within and outside of the GRNMS.
Mike Mullenix
Mike Mullenix earned a B.S. in Chemistry in 1994 and a B.S. in Biology in 1995, both from Armstrong-Atlantic State University. He has since worked as an Analytical Chemist in the Savannah Ga. area where he lives with his wife and two young daughters. Mike is serving his fourth year as Vice President of Blackbeard's Scuba Club, a not for profit organization that promotes safe recreational diving and education. In 2008 he earned his Scientific Diver certification as member of Team Ocean, part of the NOAA volunteer diving program. Having participated in several research dives, he is now awaiting his first mission onboard the Nancy Foster.
Karin Paquin
Karin M Iuzzolino-Paquin is the assistant curator at the University of Georgia Marine Extension Service on Skidaway Island in Savannah, GA. In her current role she provides husbandry and tank maintenance for the resident marine animals, develops and implements Saturday public programs, and is part of the new PR/marketing campaign to get the word out that Savannah has an aquarium out on Skidaway Island. Karin graduated from the University of New England in 2007 with her Bachelors of Science degree in Marine Biology. She spent two-and-a-half years during her undergraduate studies developing and implementing curriculum-based informal marine science program for the Marine Animal Rehabilitation and Research Education Center at the University of New England in Biddeford, Maine, while also rehabilitating seals, sea turtle, and harbor porpoises. During this time she also assisted a scientist from Bigelow Laboratories for the Ocean Sciences in his lobster shell disease research. Before coming to the University of Georgia, Karin worked for The Pier Aquarium in St. Petersburg, Fl as a Marine Education and for the Sarasota Bay Explorers out of MOTE Marine Laboratories, giving educational tours of Sarasota Bay. In her spare time Karin is working on her Captains license and AAUS diving certification.
Todd Recicar
Todd Recicar is the Vessel Captain for Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary. He started full time with Gray's Reef in June of 2007. After receiving a BS in Biology at Florida State University, he completed two Marine Education Internships; one at Newfound Harbor Marine Institute in Big Pine Key, Florida and the second at the University of Georgia's Marine Education Center and Aquarium in Savannah. After the completion of these internships, he worked as a research technician at the University of Georgia's Shellfish Research Laboratory in 1999. Prior to becoming a Gray’s Reef employee he worked for 5 1/2 years as second mate on the 92 foot Research Vessel Savannah which is operated by the Skidaway Institute of Oceanography. Todd is a NOAA Working Diver and carries a 100GT USCG license.
Eric Robillard
Eric Robillard supervises, administers, directs, and coordinates all activities associated with the Fishery Independent Unit (FIU) of the Research and Surveys Program (RSP) with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Coastal Resources Division (CRD). He also serves as Diving Safety Officer, Instructor, and chairman of CRD Dive Committee. Eric has a bachelor's degree in Biology from Eckerd College, and received his Masters of Oceanography from Old Dominion University.
George R. Sedberry
George Sedberry joined Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary as Superintendent in June 2007. Since obtaining a Ph.D. in Marine Science from the College of William and Mary, George has conducted research on hard bottom reefs off the southeastern U.S., including Gray’s Reef, on Marine Protected Areas in Belize and Madeira, and on population biology of fishes from the North and South Atlantic, Caribbean Sea, Mediterranean Sea and the western South Pacific. He has served on the Marine Protected Areas Advisory Panel and the Snapper/Grouper Assessment Panel of the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council, on the U.S. National Committee for the Census of Marine Life, and several additional scientific, advisory and education committees. He is also an Adjunct Professor at the College of Charleston, the University of South Carolina, the University of New England and the Skidaway Institute of Oceanography. He has authored over 80 scientific publications on marine fishes and ecosystems.
Spud Woodward
Spud Woodward has been employed with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources for 25 years and has served as the Coastal Resources Division Assistant Director for Marine Fisheries since 2002. He supervises the daily operations of a 35-person workforce of marine scientists, technicians, and vessel captains and administers an annual budget of $3 million. He is actively involved in development of state, interstate, and federal marine fisheries conservation and serves as Georgia’s administrative commissioner to the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission and agency representative on the Gray’s Reef Sanctuary Advisory Council. A state and federally licensed guide and vessel captain, Woodward has contributed over 100 articles to both professional and popular publications and has been featured in several episodes of Georgia Outdoors, and on the ESPN production, George Poveromo’s World of Saltwater Fishing. He enjoys teaching others about fishing and has conducted more than 200 fishing seminars at boat shows, fishing club meetings, and larger venues such as the Salt Water Sportsman Magazine National Seminar Series, which he has co-hosted twice.