News
First meeting of the Scientific Advisory Board of the environmental DNA initiative

The project 鈥淓nvironmental DNA Expeditions in UNESCO World Heritage Marine Sites鈥 is guided by an international Scientific Advisory Board that brings together some of the world鈥檚 leading science and expertise in molecular ecology, eDNA, bioinformatics, fish metabarcoding, ocean science. Its sixteen members include:
- Masaki Miya (Japan), Senior Principal Research Scientist at the Natural History Museum and Institute
- Vanessa Yepes-Narvaez, Ph.D. (Colombia), Scientific researcher in the Marine and Coastal Research Institute of Colombia
- Bruce Deagle (Australia), Science Leader and Director of the CSIRO Australian National Fish Collection
- Francisco Chavez (USA), MBARI
- Professor Sophie von der Heyden (South Africa), University of Stellenbosch
- Associate Professor Craig Sherman (Australia), Deakin University
- Professor Dianne Gleeson (Australia), Principal Researcher at EcoDNA, University of Canberra.
- Giomar Helena Borrero P茅rez (Colombia), Researcher at the Marine and Coastal Research Institute of Colombia
- Kelly Goodwin, NOAA鈥檚 Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory
- Naiara Rodr铆guez-Ezpeleta (Spain), Senior researcher at AZTI
- Nicolas Pade, Ph.D. (France), Executive Director of EMBRC-ERIC
- Ole Bj酶rn Brodnicke (Denmark), Ph.D. fellow at Copenhagen University
- Pascal Habl眉tzel, Ph.D. (Switzerland), Senior scientist at the Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ)
- Kim Pr忙bel (Norway), Professor in population genetics at The Arctic University
- Julia Busch (Germany), Programme Officer at the Common Wadden Sea Secretariat
- Hugo Gante (Belgium), Assistant professor at KU Leuven and senior scientist at the Royal Museum for Central Africa
The Scientific Advisory Board represents and acts as a connection to cutting-edge global scientific knowledge in the use of the eDNA sampling for marine biodiversity monitoring. The Scientific Advisory Board will collaborate with the UNESCO coordination team and partner eDNA laboratory in defining the optimum sampling and sample processing protocols within the limitations of citizen science sampling. In addition, the members of the Scientific Advisory Board will play a key role in the development of the publications utilizing the results of the project.
The project is implemented by UNESCO鈥檚 Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission and World Heritage Centre, with the support of the Government of Flanders. It is the first UN Decade Action for Marine World Heritage, in the context of the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021-2030).
More information about the project is available here.