The U.S. Marine Mammal Commission will be accepting proposals until Wednesday, 
April 12, 2023 for projects focused on understanding marine mammal population 
health in a changing climate.  Funding requests are limited to $60,000 USD.

Marine Mammal Health in a Changing Climate

The Marine Mammal Commission's mission, as defined by the U.S. Marine Mammal 
Protection Act (MMPA), is to ensure that marine mammal populations are restored 
and maintained as significant functioning elements of healthy marine 
ecosystems. However, numerous stressors, including pollution, habitat loss, 
overfishing and fisheries bycatch, noise, and vessel traffic, threaten both the 
health of marine mammals and the health of marine ecosystems of which they are 
a part.  In addition, climate change is leading to warming seas, extreme 
weather events, ocean acidification, and shifts in range and abundance of many 
marine species and infectious agents, all of which can disrupt ecosystem 
processes and function, including impacts on the health of marine mammals. For 
example, some viruses and bacteria that cause disease in marine mammals and 
other marine wildlife have increased in prevalence or been detected outside of 
their previously documented range; harmful algal blooms (HABs) that produce 
dangerous toxins have become more frequent and extensive; increased freshwater 
discharge from terrestrial sources has dropped salinity in coastal waters and 
led to marine mammal unusual mortality events; and changes in prey 
distribution, nutritional quality, or availability are impacting body 
condition, growth, reproduction, and survival of some marine mammal species. 
Monitoring the health of populations may provide an early warning of emerging 
issues prior to observable changes in vital rates or abundance, and may also 
provide insight into the underlying causes of a population decline. Increased 
capacity to detect changes in marine mammal population health and understand 
the underlying factors and processes contributing to those changes is 
critically needed to be prepared to respond to and mitigate impacts related to 
changing marine ecosystems, particularly in the face of climate change.

We are seeking proposals for projects that:

Further our understanding of how environmental factors affect marine mammal 
population health.

In this context, we define "population health" as the distribution of health 
indicators or outcomes in a population or subset of a population. Health 
indicators could include a single measure or aggregate measure of body 
condition or energy stores, organ status, immune status, sublethal injury from 
trauma or human interaction, or infectious disease. Projects that use long-term 
data or archived time-series samples are welcome, as are prospective studies, 
or projects that provide innovative tools for assessing health indicators to 
support long-term surveillance into the future.

We are particularly interested in learning about changes in population health 
driven by climate change, and encourage proposals that investigate how 
environmental factors that will be affected by a changing climate, such as prey 
availability or nutritional quality, HAB toxins, pathogens, temperature, or 
salinity, influence health of marine mammals.  Proposals that increase the 
inclusion or representation of people from underserved groups in marine mammal 
research, management, or conservation are strongly encouraged.

Eligibility: Applicants from both within the U.S. as well as outside the U.S. 
are eligible to apply, including both non-U.S. citizens and those affiliated 
with non-U.S. institutions.

Proposal deadline: Wednesday, April 12th 2023 11:59pm EDT

Applicant notification: by Monday, July 31st 2023

Proposals should be submitted electronically to the Marine Mammal Commission 
e-mail address: r...@mmc.gov<mailto:r...@mmc.gov>.  Please be sure to reference 
both the Current Funding Opportunities as well as the Proposal Requirements web 
pages prior to submitting proposals.  More details can be found on the 
Commission's webpages below:

Current funding opportunities:
https://www.mmc.gov/grants-and-research-survey/current-funding-opportunities/

Proposal requirements:
https://www.mmc.gov/grants-and-research-survey/current-funding-opportunities/proposal-requirements/


Dee Allen
Scientific Program Officer
Marine Mammal Commission
4340 East-West Highway, Suite 700
Bethesda, MD 20814-4498
301-504-0087
dal...@mmc.gov<mailto:dal...@mmc.gov>

Follow us on Twitter: @MarineMammalCom
Visit us online: www.mmc.gov<http://www.mmc.gov/>

The Marine Mammal Commission is an independent agency of the U.S. Government.

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