The Maui Nō Ka ‘Oi Podcast Presented By SilverShark Media

Ed Lyman (NOAA / Humpback Whale Entanglement Response)

February 27, 2024 Jason Evans Episode 155
Ed Lyman (NOAA / Humpback Whale Entanglement Response)
The Maui Nō Ka ‘Oi Podcast Presented By SilverShark Media
More Info
The Maui Nō Ka ‘Oi Podcast Presented By SilverShark Media
Ed Lyman (NOAA / Humpback Whale Entanglement Response)
Feb 27, 2024 Episode 155
Jason Evans

Jason Evans of SilverShark Media speaks to Ed Lyman, Regional Large Whale Entanglement Response Coordinator under NOAA's Marine Mammal Health & Stranding Response Program.  In this podcast Ed talks about the work of NOAA Fisheries, his role with the Marine Mammal Health & Stranding Response Program, the recent incident last week with the injured whale calf that was spotted off Ma'alaea, the importance of science communication, how research helped give boat operators a guide for speed out on the water to minimize harmful whale encounters, why individuals shouldn't try to help a whale out on the water and instead call the hotline to report an incident, how this has been a different type of season out on the water, and how people can get involved to support NOAA and the response team. 

Hotline to call if you see a whale (or other marine animal) in distress:  
888-256-9840 (Toll Free)

Link to the course Ed mentions at 18:55

https://pacific-islands-training.whaledisentanglement.org/#/ 

Show Notes

Jason Evans of SilverShark Media speaks to Ed Lyman, Regional Large Whale Entanglement Response Coordinator under NOAA's Marine Mammal Health & Stranding Response Program.  In this podcast Ed talks about the work of NOAA Fisheries, his role with the Marine Mammal Health & Stranding Response Program, the recent incident last week with the injured whale calf that was spotted off Ma'alaea, the importance of science communication, how research helped give boat operators a guide for speed out on the water to minimize harmful whale encounters, why individuals shouldn't try to help a whale out on the water and instead call the hotline to report an incident, how this has been a different type of season out on the water, and how people can get involved to support NOAA and the response team. 

Hotline to call if you see a whale (or other marine animal) in distress:  
888-256-9840 (Toll Free)

Link to the course Ed mentions at 18:55

https://pacific-islands-training.whaledisentanglement.org/#/