SeaDoc Society

SeaDoc Society SeaDoc Society works to ensure the health of marine wildlife and their ecosystems through science and education.
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Wednesday night at Orcas Island Public Library! Join us at 6pm for this free event!
05/20/2026

Wednesday night at Orcas Island Public Library! Join us at 6pm for this free event!

We’re so excited to co-host this great evening with Drew Harvell at the ! This FREE event will explore How Salish Sea Stars are Faring in our Ocean’s Menagerie, and more. Join us Wednesday May 20th at 6PM!

⭐️🌊⭐️🌊⭐️🌊

Drew Harvell’s team has worked for over a decade on the mysterious disease killing seastars and will update on where we go now that the team has identified the killer in our waters. She will also talk about local examples from her new book, such as jellyfish that glow in the dark, sea stars with super strength and nudibranchs that steal defenses. In The Ocean’s Menagerie: How Earth’s Strangest Creatures Reshape the Rules of Life, Harvell explores how these spineless creatures have turned 600 million years of adaptation into a stockpile of evolutionary “superpowers” to thrive in aquatic landscapes around the world.

Thanks to Orcas Library for making this special event possible.

We’re so excited to co-host this great evening with Drew Harvell at the ! This FREE event will explore How Salish Sea St...
05/05/2026

We’re so excited to co-host this great evening with Drew Harvell at the ! This FREE event will explore How Salish Sea Stars are Faring in our Ocean’s Menagerie, and more. Join us Wednesday May 20th at 6PM!

⭐️🌊⭐️🌊⭐️🌊

Drew Harvell’s team has worked for over a decade on the mysterious disease killing seastars and will update on where we go now that the team has identified the killer in our waters. She will also talk about local examples from her new book, such as jellyfish that glow in the dark, sea stars with super strength and nudibranchs that steal defenses. In The Ocean’s Menagerie: How Earth’s Strangest Creatures Reshape the Rules of Life, Harvell explores how these spineless creatures have turned 600 million years of adaptation into a stockpile of evolutionary “superpowers” to thrive in aquatic landscapes around the world.

Thanks to Orcas Library for making this special event possible.

It’s Earth Day! 🌎 — Giles is at  this evening for a casual talk about killer whales, poop-sniffing dogs, non-invasive re...
04/23/2026

It’s Earth Day! 🌎 — Giles is at this evening for a casual talk about killer whales, poop-sniffing dogs, non-invasive research drones and all of the great work being done to protect the Salish Sea and our shared planet. It’s a small space, but if you’re on Prcas Island stroll by to see if there’s space.

☀️Dr. Deborah Giles is SeaDoc Society’s esteemed killer whale scientist and handler to her orca research dog, Eba.

Thanks to Orcas Island , The Barnacle, and the for having us!

Sea lions are stacked on docks across Seattle's Ballard neighborhood right now. SeaDoc Science Director Joe Gaydos joine...
04/22/2026

Sea lions are stacked on docks across Seattle's Ballard neighborhood right now. SeaDoc Science Director Joe Gaydos joined FOX 13's Lauren Donovan to talk about why they're here.

6 likes, 1 comment. "A sign of the sea lions: Why they're gathering in Seattle"

04/16/2026

SeaDoc was featured on this weekend to highlight our Salish Sea Wild collaboration with the ! Dr. Joe Gaydos and Kraken goalie counted down the region’s Top 5 sea monsters. Thanks to for the great piece! Links to the King 5 story and full Salish Sea Wild episode in our bio and Stories.

Exciting News: SeaDoc Society has added a new scientist! In a time when US science funding is experiencing broad cuts, w...
04/09/2026

Exciting News: SeaDoc Society has added a new scientist! In a time when US science funding is experiencing broad cuts, we're expanding our impact with the hiring of Dr. Michelle Barbieri Lino. Here is the full announcement:

The SeaDoc Society has hired a new full-time veterinary translational scientist, who will join the team on Orcas Island starting this summer.

Dr. Michelle Barbieri Lino, who interned with SeaDoc as a veterinary student back in 2009, monitoring the marine mammal stranding network among other roles, will be moving to Orcas Island with her husband and 7-year-old daughter this summer.

Lino and her family currently live on Oʻahu, where she formally led National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Hawaiian Monk Seal Research Program. She has played a key role in the recovery of the species since 2012, helping to reverse the endangered population’s decline.

Lino’s addition to the SeaDoc team comes just one year after the local nonprofit merged with Wild Orca, bringing respected Killer Whale Scientist Dr. Deborah Giles onto the team. In a time when US science funding is experiencing broad cuts, the SeaDoc Society is actively working to grow its impact.

Lino joins a scientific team of Dr. Giles, SeaDoc Research Assistant Cat Lo and Science Director Joe Gaydos.

“I couldn’t be more excited about Michelle coming on board to further expand our scientific impact,” said Gaydos. “She brings everything we were looking for and more: veterinary skills working with endangered marine wildlife, a strong science publication record, experience working with native and local communities, and science translation skills at the local and national level. Did I mention she also can drive a boat?”

Lino grew up in Maryland and first discovered her love of wildlife and marine ecosystems during trips to the Chesapeake Bay. She attended college at University of North Carolina Wilmington and later received her Doctor of Veterinary Medicine from the UC Davis Weill School of Veterinary Medicine. Along the way she worked on projects related to Southern Right Whales in Argentina, marine mammals in the Bay Area, and even spent a whole summer working with SeaDoc on Orcas Island in 2009.

“As a SeaDoc intern, I immediately learned that both the wildlife and community of the Salish Sea were indescribably special,” said Lino. “And now, as a wildlife veterinarian, it’s an immense privilege to join this community and serve this ecosystem by advancing conservation here.”

Lino brings not only her vast scientific expertise and experience, but also her skills in management, communication, and building strong coalitions.

“I look forward to deepening and developing relationships to conduct conservation research and share our science,” said Lino.

The endangered Hawaiian Monk Seal population was in decline when Lino started at NOAA, with every animal critical to the species’ future. During her 13+ years with the program–the last seven as its lead–she and her collaborators reversed the trend and took the population from about 1,000 to 1,600 and counting.

As a Translational Scientist with SeaDoc, Lino’s work will be wide-ranging with an eye toward the health of the ecosystem. She will work to ensure that SeaDoc Society’s scientific efforts drive positive change for the ecosystem along with the wildlife and people who call it home.

“We’re grateful to all of the private donors that made this SeaDoc expansion possible,” said Gaydos.

Seattle Kraken goalie Joey Daccord welcomes SeaDoc Society's Dr. Joe Gaydos to The Deep, where they count down the Top F...
04/08/2026

Seattle Kraken goalie Joey Daccord welcomes SeaDoc Society's Dr. Joe Gaydos to The Deep, where they count down the Top Five Sea Monsters of the Salish Sea! Check out our latest episode of Salish Sea Wild!

Seattle Kraken goalie Joey Daccord welcomes SeaDoc's Dr. Joe Gayodos to The Deep where they count down the Top Five Sea Monsters of the Salish Sea. Written a...

04/08/2026

Last weekend, an episode of Salish Sea Wild played on the Jumbotron during a Seattle Kraken game at Climate Pledge Arena! SeaDoc Society Science Director Joe Gaydos and Kraken goalie Joey Daccord counted down our TOP FIVE LOCAL SEA MONSTERS!

This is the short Jumbotron version! 🚨

The full episode DIVES DEEPER with each of these monsters! Link in comments! 🏒

04/06/2026

Exciting weekend over here at SeaDoc! Our team received the Hero of the Deep award by Seattle’s pro hockey team, the ! The award was presented to the team on the Jumbotron at Climate Pledge Arena and featured on the TV broadcast—a cool moment of recognition for Salish Sea science that you make possible. Big thanks to The Kraken for having us and for supporting our work!

More photos and a VERY SPECIAL episode of Salish Sea Wild coming soon! 🐙

🎥: Hannah Gaydos

Science is at the foundation of everything we do at SeaDoc, and for decades our Scientific Advisory Committee has played...
03/16/2026

Science is at the foundation of everything we do at SeaDoc, and for decades our Scientific Advisory Committee has played a vital role on that front. The Committee is made up of respected individual scientists doing important work throughout the Salish Sea and beyond. This month we say a warm goodbye to longtime advisor, Meg Chadsey, and welcome two new exciting additions, Jennifer Russell and Lisa Watkins.

Hear some parting words from Meg, and meet Jennifer and Lisa at the SeaDoc blog! (Link in bio)

☀ seadocsociety.org/blog

Address

1020 Deer Harbor Road
Eastsound, WA
98245

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Tuesday 9am - 4pm
Wednesday 9am - 4pm
Thursday 9am - 4pm
Friday 9am - 4pm

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