
Scripps Student
Wins Switzer Fellowship
Ayana Johnson of Scripps’ Center for Marine Biodiversity
and Conservation
is developing new methods for sustainable fisheries
management
Scripps Institution of
Oceanography/University of California, San Diego
Fourth-year Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San
Diego marine biology graduate student Ayana Johnson has been selected to
receive a prestigious fellowship by the Robert and Patricia Switzer Foundation.
Johnson, who studies marine resource management in
Scripps’ Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation, was awarded $15,000 as
a Switzer Environmental Fellow. The Switzer Foundation awards annual
fellowships for emerging environmental leaders “to advance their skills and
develop their expertise to address critical conservation challenges.”
Johnson researches the sustainable management of coral
reef fishes through field work on the island of Curacao in the Caribbean. Last
summer she completed an ecological and economic assessment of Curacao’s trap
fishery and developed a method to reduce fish trap bycatch by 80 percent. She
aims to produce a gear-based approach to sustainable fisheries management that
could serve as a blueprint for other coral reefs.

In the fall Johnson will return to Curacao to assess the
gill net fishery and conduct a socioeconomic survey of the island’s 200
fishermen.
Prior to joining Scripps, Johnson received a bachelor’s
degree in environmental science and public policy from Harvard University. She
spent two years as a policy analyst at the Environmental Protection Agency in
Washington, D.C., developing and analyzing marine regulations and policies.
After completing her Ph.D., she hopes to return to environmental policy work
and apply her expertise in both the natural and social sciences.
Johnson is among 20 Switzer Environmental Fellowship
winners in 2009.
The Robert and Patricia Switzer Foundation was established
in 1986 as an organization that mobilizes leaders from diverse disciplines who
focus on integrated solutions to environmental problems.
-- Mario Aguilera
September 9, 2009
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