Karen Stockin

Karen Ann Stockin is a New Zealand academic marine ecologist, and as of 2021 is a full professor at Massey University and a Rutherford Discovery Fellow for Royal Society Te Apārangi (New Zealand). Her research focuses on animal welfare and the impacts of human activities on cetacean populations, including tourism effects, and persistent marine contaminants.

Karen Stockin
Stockin in 2023
Born
Karen Ann Stockin
Alma materUniversity of Plymouth
Massey University
Scientific career
FieldsMarine Mammalogist, Marine Biology
InstitutionsMassey University
Thesis
  • The New Zealand common dolphin (Delphinus sp.) : identity, ecology and conservation  (2008)
Doctoral advisorMark Orams

Academic career

Stockin obtained a Bachelors of Science (Honours) from the University of Plymouth, and a Masters of Science as a European Union Scholar from the University of Aberdeen. She completed her PhD as a Commonwealth Scholar at Massey University in 2008, with a thesis titled "The New Zealand common dolphin (Delphinus sp.): identity, ecology and conservation", supervised by Mark Orams.[1][2]

Stockin was the inaugural strandings coordinator for the International Whaling Commission,[3] and serves on the IWC Strandings Initiative Expert Panel.[4]

Recognition

In 2005, Stockin was awarded a Hutton Award by the Royal Society Te Apārangi.

In 2018, Stockin received a Rutherford Discovery Fellowship for a project title "The application of artificial intelligence (AI), innovative technologies and evolutionary theory to address the conservation-welfare nexus during human-wildlife interactions".[5] She was also made the inaugural Bob Kerridge Animal Welfare Fellow in the same year.[3]

Selected works

References

External links