Science & Innovation
Connecting research with action to accelerate ocean protection and restoration across the Hope Spot® network.
About the Science
Mission Blue’s Science Initiative advances ocean protection and restoration across the Hope Spot network by grounding action in credible, relevant, and usable science. W e connect global expertise with place-based leadership to generate the knowledge needed to safeguard marine ecosystems. Working in partnership with Hope Spot Champions, scientists, and institutions around the world, the Science Initiative ensures that data becomes insight, and insight drives meaningful conservation outcomes. Explore our science programmes below.
Mission Blue's Science Programmes
Charting the Blue
Using environmental DNA (eDNA) alongside complementary monitoring approaches, Charting the Blue helps Hope Spot Champions generate robust, up-to-date evidence to strengthen protection and restoration efforts, while contributing to a coordinated global dataset across the Hope Spot network.
Listening to the Ocean
Through continuous acoustic monitoring within Hope Spots, Listening to the Ocean reveals patterns of biodiversity, ecosystem health, resilience, and human pressure that traditional surveys often miss.
Our College of Experts
The College of Experts advisory panel brings together leading scientists and experts to provide trusted guidance, strengthen our programmes, and ensure that the science drives meaningful ocean protection.
Dr. Jason Wood
College of Experts
Sea Mammal Research Unit (SMRU), University of St Andrews, Scotland
College of Experts
Prof. Heather Koldewey
Head of Ocean and FAIRER Conservation
Tropical Marine Ecology, Regional Capacity Building
Zoological Society of London; Bertarelli Foundation
Heather is Head of Ocean and FAIRER Conservation at the Zoological Society of London, Honorary Professor at the University of Exeter, and a National Geographic Explorer. She leads the Bertarelli Foundation’s Indian Ocean Marine Science programme, a UN Decade-endorsed Action that connects scientists across disciplines to protect and restore marine biodiversity, including coral reefs, seabirds, and sharks. Through collaboration, knowledge-sharing, and expanding access to marine science, the programme is driving innovative solutions for a thriving ocean.
Prof. Alex Rogers
College of Experts
Deep Ocean Biodiversity, eDNA
Deputy Director Strategic Sciences Programmes and Partnerships National Oceanography Centre, UK
Alex is a marine ecologist who is interested in how biodiversity is distributed in the ocean, especially in the deep sea and on deep tropical coral reefs. He is also interested in human impacts on the ocean and how to manage human activities to mitigate or reduce degradation of marine ecosystems. His work has taken him to the Atlantic, Caribbean, Indian, Pacific and Southern Oceans as well as Arctic Seas investigating coral reef ecosystems, both in shallow water and the deep sea, seamounts, deep-sea hydrothermal vents and hydrocarbon seeps. Alex has worked with governments, intergovernmental and non-governmental organisations on human impacts, especially those from deep-sea fishing and climate change, and on the development of policy solutions to such problems. Alex published the book The Deep: The Hidden Wonders of the Ocean and How to Protect Them .
Dr. George Shillinger
Executive Director and President
Movement tracking – turtles
Upwell Turtles
Dr. George Shillinger is the Executive Director, co-founder and lead scientist for Upwell Turtles. He is also a founding board member and Treasurer for MigraMar, a member of the IUCN Marine Turtle Specialist Group, and the Board Chair and 2026 Host of the West Coast Sea Turtle Society. George has a PhD in Marine Biology and an MS in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from Stanford University, an MBA from the Yale University School of Management, and a BA in the Biological Basis of Behavior from the University of Pennsylvania.
George develops scientific partnerships and leverages data to set conservation priorities, build support in key constituencies and advance protections for turtles at sea. He has worked in international environmental conservation since 1986, and has extensive expertise using satellite and acoustic tags, remotely-sensed environmental datasets, and fisheries datasets, to track, interpret, and predict the movements and behaviors of sea turtles and other pelagic predators, including billfish, sharks, and tuna.
As a co-founder of the first-ever Great Turtle Race in 2007, he used satellite-tracking data to raise global awareness for critically endangered East Pacific leatherbacks. George also launched Upwell Turtles’ “Lost Years Initiative” which endeavors to refine the development of novel electronic tags for deployment on early-stage sea turtles, with the aim of addressing knowledge gaps in sea turtle ecology and conservation biology.
Through his role with Upwell, George has developed numerous international research partnerships on various themes (e.g. electronic tracking, in-water monitoring, population and species distribution modeling, health and body condition, biotelemetry, bycatch assessment and mitigation, and efforts aimed at recovery of highly imperiled sea turtle populations.
Dr. Jessica Stella
Chief Scientist
Coral Reef Ecology
General Organization for the Conservation of Coral Reefs and Turtles in the Red Sea (SHAMS)
Jessica is a marine ecologist with a strong focus on the effects of climate change on the reef system. Her foray into the marine sphere started at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum and Zoo, and the Bermuda Zoological Society, helping to establish the baseline monitoring program for coral reefs and seagrass (Project Bream), and assisting with green turtle population studies as part of the Bermuda Turtle Project. She earned a PhD from James Cook University for her research on the effects of climate-change on coral-reliant invertebrates. She has a broad knowledge of coral reef invertebrate taxonomy and an in-depth knowledge of invertebrates that specialise on live coral. She has worked in natural resource management for the past 14 years, at the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority in Australia, focusing on assessing and communicating reef health events, such as mass bleaching, and developing the GBR Outlook Report 2019, the GBRMPA’s Science Strategy, and representing science for management on two fisheries working groups (QLD Sea Cucumber and Coral fisheries). More recently, she has been serving as the founding Chief Scientist at the General Organisation for the Conservation of Coral Reef and Sea Turtles in the Red Sea, a new government organization in Saudi Arabia, establishing baseline monitoring and impact assessment programs and science governance needed to ensure evidence-based decision making. She is an experienced science communicator with a passion for making science accessible to broad audiences.
Dr. Arthur Tuda
Executive Director
Western Indian Ocean
Western Indian Ocean Marine Science Association
Arthur Tuda is the Executive Director of the Western Indian Ocean Marine Science Association (WIOMSA), a leading regional organisation advancing marine science and its application to policy and practice across the Western Indian Ocean. His work sits at the interface of science, policy, and implementation, with a strong focus on strengthening the effectiveness of marine protected areas, ecosystem-based management, and regional cooperation.
Arthur has been instrumental in driving initiatives aligned with global frameworks, such as the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, and in supporting countries in translating commitments into action. He has also championed efforts to professionalise the marine conservation workforce, recognising that effective conservation depends on skilled and supported practitioners.
He serves on the Mission Blue Hope Spot Council and brings a systems-oriented perspective to advancing resilient and impactful ocean conservation.
Keith Vangraafeiland
Senior Principal GIS Engineer
GIS, Esri
ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World
Keith VanGraafeiland is a Senior Principal GIS Engineer at Esri, serving as the Ocean Content Lead for the ArcGIS Living Atlas of the World. With over 18 years of experience, Keith specializes in marine and environmental GIS solutions, remote sensing, and the application of advanced data science techniques to solve real-world challenges. As a leader in Ocean Data Science, Keith develops innovative workflows that transform complex scientific and observational data into actionable insights for researchers, policymakers, and the broader GIS community.
Dr. Dawn Wright
College of Experts
Deep Ocean Science, GIS
Esri Chief Scientist
Dawn Wright is Chief Scientist of Esri. She works to strengthen the scientific foundation for the company’s products and services. Notably, Dawn led the team that created the Ecological Marine Units (EMUs), a 3D digital ocean that creates better understanding of marine environments and how to plan for more sustainable activities there in the wake of climate change. Dawn joined Esri in 2011, and has written and contributed to some of the most definitive literature on marine geographic information system (GIS) technology. An elected member of both the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering, as well as the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, she earned her doctorate in Physical Geography and Marine Geology from UC Santa Barbara. In 2022, Dawn became the first Black person to visit the Challenger Deep in the Pacific Ocean, the deepest and most unexplored place on planet Earth.
Science for a Living Ocean
Mission Blue’s Science Initiative is focused on protecting and restoring biodiversity while strengthening ocean knowledge systems and community capacity, in line with several of the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science Challenges.
- Challenge 2: Protect and restore ecosystems and biodiversity
- Challenge 7: Sustainably expand the Global Ocean Observing System
- Challenge 8: Create a digital representation of the ocean
- Challenge 8: Create a digital representation of the ocean
- Challenge 10: Restore society’s relationship with the ocean
Ocean Science Insights
A curated news feed of science and innovation updates from across our global network.
At Least 30% Protection by 2030
By 2030, the global commitment is clear: protect at least 30% of the ocean and advance active restoration across another 30%—safeguarding what remains and recovering what has been lost.
Mission Blue works to ensure this goal is not achieved on paper alone. Through the Hope Spot network, we prioritise highly protected areas, strengthen effective management, and accelerate restoration, aligning science, community leadership, and global advocacy to deliver measurable, lasting outcomes for the ocean.