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Iain Kerr
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Photo: Chris Johnson |
STAFF
Iain Kerr - Vice President/ CEO / Expedition Leader - Voyage of the Odyssey
Captain Kerr, born in Scotland, began his career with dolphins
in 1983 as a volunteer research assistant at the Dolphin Research
Center in Florida, and in 1984 he earned his Captains License.
In 1987, Iain served as a research assistant to Dr. Roger
Payne at the New York Zoological Society's whale camp in Peninsula
Valdes, Argentina, assisting with the development of new benign
methods for the study of the endangered southern Right whale.
In 1988/89, under the auspices of the Ocean Alliance and
the Interpolar Research Society, he captained the 85ft. research
vessel Siben. The Siben Project was an international research
effort involving biologists from the Dominican Republic, Colombia
and Ecuador. Aboard the Siben, Iain helped teach biologists
new benign research methodologies and the implementation of
a multi-beam scanning sonar unit in order to track whales
underwater. In 1990, Iain was promoted to Director of Ocean
Research for the Whale Conservation Institute and soon after
he procured the R.V. Odyssey. The Odyssey is a 93' steel-hulled
ketch capable of spending extended periods of time offshore
with little or no shore support, enabling OA scientists to
study deep water cetaceans like the Sperm whale. In 1993,
Iain lead the Odyssey Expedition to the Galapagos Islands.
He was responsible for creating the research team, the visiting
scientist program and for the development of new technologies
for studying whales.
The Galapagos expedition proved very successful; Odyssey
researchers were the first to sight Blue whales in this area;
visiting scientist Bruce Mate was the first to successfully
satellite tag a sperm whale. The first electrocardiogram of
a sperm whale was made by Dr. Jorge Reynolds and Iain recorded
the first ultrasound of a free ranging Sperm whale from the
Odyssey. The remote probe WHALECAM was also developed in the
Galapagos. It was in the Galapagos that Iain fulfilled his
mission to have the Odyssey become a leading scientific vessel
and platform for visiting whale researchers and documentary
teams.
To date the Odyssey has been featured on PBS, Discovery Channel,
BBC, Canal Plus, NHK and TV New Zealand. In 1995 the IMAX
film WHALES was shot aboard the Odyssey and in 1997 Turner
Broadcasting System and NHK shot what we believe to be the
first ever Hi Definition film on whales "Diving With the Great
Whales."
Iain, now Vice President and CEO of Ocean Alliance, is directing
much of his energies on a five year program designed to gather
the first ever baseline data on synthetic contaminants throughout
the world's oceans. This program, the Voyage of the Odyssey
will use whales and Albatrosses as indicator species for measuring
the health of the seas. Iain will work with Dr. Payne and
leading scientists from around the world, using the R.V. Odyssey
as the main platform for data collection.
Iain received an honors degree in education from the University
of London and his green card in 1997. He is an accomplished
speaker and photographer. Iain has led expeditions to all
parts of the globe, including Australia, the Amazon Basin,
Argentina, Alaska, the Caribbean, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador,
Hawaii and Mexico.
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