John E. Heyning Research Award

John E. Heyning Research Award

John E. Heyning was a marine biologist with the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County who furthered research on whales and helped build one of the world’s largest collections of marine mammals. As the museum’s deputy director and one of its curators, he was instrumental in amassing its more than 4,000 specimens. Only the Smithsonian Institution in Washington has a larger collection. John’s research focused on the natural history, anatomy, evolution and conservation of whales, dolphins and porpoises, especially delphinids and ziphiids. This grant is presented in accordance with John’s last wishes and is for the best proposal received from an established researcher to investigate any area of cetacean integrative biology that relates diverse aspects of biology within an evolutionary context. A single biennial grant of up to $5,000 will be considered.

The 2016 John E. Heyning award winner was Rachel. A. Racicot for her proposal entitled, Predicting hearing sensibilities of beaked whales using inner ear morphology.

 

 

 

 

 

Become a member of the Society for Marine Mammalogy to receive updates on the next open call for the John E. Heyning Research Award submissions.