
The Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary (CINMS) is one of fourteen national marine sanctuaries located across the country. These underwater parks are places where government, academic and citizen scientists work collectively to enhance our understanding of natural resources.
Partnerships and collaboration are essential to accomplishing research, monitoring, and resource management within sanctuaries. By engaging with existing partners, as well as forging my own relationships, I have dramatically expanded my professional network.
A growing network

The Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council is a community-based body that provides a public forum for consultation and deliberation on resource management issues affecting the waters surrounding the Channel Islands. I contribute substantively to these meetings by soliciting speakers, preparing content and giving presentations, as well as execute meeting logistics. Through this work, I have engaged with council members representing:
- Other sanctuary sites
- Other branches of NOAA (e.g., Fisheries)
- Other federal agencies (e.g., National Park Service, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management)
- California state agencies (e.g., Coastal Commission, Department of Natural Resources)
- Local county agencies (e.g., Santa Barbara, Ventura)
- Chumash community members
- Environmental non-profits
- Educators
- Commercial and recreational fishers
- Tourism business owners
In addition to interacting with these members over council meetings, I met with some for informational interviews to learn more about their career and the agency or organization they represent, and even engaged some to help with several island beach cleanup events sponsored by CINMS.

I have also worked with local agencies, other sanctuary sites, other branches of NOAA, foundations, and the shipping industry through my role with the Vessel Speed Reduction incentive program. The program is designed to slow commercial ships down along the California coast to reduce the risk of fatal strikes to endangered whales and improve air quality by reducing local emissions. My involvement included developing program parameters with partners, communicating these to shipping companies, evaluating their cooperation, and planning an awards ceremony and positive public relations campaign at the conclusion of the program.

Finally, I have worked on a collaborative project to restore endangered white abalone in Southern California. I joined several cruises to look for wild populations of white abalone around the Channel Islands and in San Diego, and participated in a workshop to develop a plan for outplanting captive-reared juvenile abalone into the wild.
Through this work, I met researchers and conservation practitioners from NOAA Fisheries, National Park Service, Santa Monica Bay Foundation, Paua Marine Research Group, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.
In summary, fellows placed with the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary will learn about marine policy and conservation from not only this host agency, but also from the many partners and collaborators who work with the sanctuary to study and protect this special place and its inhabitants. These experiences and the relationships built during the fellowship provide a broad perspective on marine conservation and help fellows develop a diverse professional network that will serve them well throughout their careers.
Written by Lindsay Marks
