You may not know it, but Charleston is one of the most important places for dolphin research in the world, according to experts at the National Marine Mammal Foundation (NMMF).
From examining the unique strand feeding method used by local dolphins to find mullet to studying their head-standing through the pluff mud to shovel for crabs, local research into bottlenose dolphins is vital to understanding dolphins globally.
The NMMF, a new partner in this weekendโs Southeastern Wildlife Expo (SEWE), is indispensable for keeping dolphins healthy, said NMMF officials. More importantly, the organization has made discoveries here that have benefited marine mammal populations worldwide.

โCharleston is an important place for dolphin research,โ says NMMF Field Manager Brian Quigley. โThe dolphins here have served as an important reference population to compare to populations in other parts of the country.
โDolphins are sentinel species, which means they can be indicators of ecosystem health. Therefore, continued research of our local population is essential to monitor long-term trends and detect potential threats to the environment.โ
Charleston is NMMFโs
East Coast home
Like NMMF, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) chose Charleston as a location for one of its 10 laboratories due to the local cetacean population.
Another factor in Charlestonโs ties to marine mammal conservation is the legacy of the late U.S. Sen. Ernest โFritzโ Hollings, who represented the Palmetto State for decades.
โSenator Hollings was instrumental in the [1972] Marine Mammal Protection Act and the Oceans and Human Health Act,โ Quigley said. โAnd both of those are instruments that pretty much drive a lot of research thatโs done for marine mammals.โ
These acts, he added, generated much of the work of NOAA and NMMF to take place. Both organizations work primarily at a marine lab on James Island named in Hollingsโ honor.
Since the NMMF opened its Charleston location in 2018, it has conducted regular field projects to monitor the health, behavior and population of local dolphins.

โOn a typical field day around here, we might have to go get a boat from Fort Johnson, and weโll survey around Charleston Harbor and up some of the rivers maybe out to the coast, and then do everything in reverse,โ Quigley said. โAt the end of the day, we write up a summary for the day and start to process the data. So 90% of the work is outside of the field effort.โ
Quigley added that the NMMFโs work is also done around the country and even overseas. The Charleston location employs three of the foundationโs team of more than 150 biologists, scientists, conservationists, veterinarians and community engagement specialists. โMany of us travel to wherever we are needed to protect marine mammals, and provide technical, medical, and scientific expertise,โ Quigley said.
NMMF Executive Operations Officer Kristina Martz, who works out of the organizationโs San Diego headquarters, added, โOne of our teammates just came back from rescues with dolphins in Pakistan. We have people traveling all of the time to marine mammal conferences and scientific conferences. So itโs a revolving door, but itโs always great.โ
The NMMF team
As the NMMFโs Charleston station field manager and field biologist, Quigley works in conservation medicine for the foundation. He runs the show in Charleston, while Martz coordinates global efforts from their headquarters in San Diego. Both will be in Charleston during SEWE to explain the NMMFโs dolphin research to thousands of expo visitors.
โThe United States Navyโs marine mammal program offered me a job right upon graduation from school,โ Martz said. โAnd so I started there, right out of college in a position providing care to the U.S. Navyโs dolphins and sea lions โ and I did that for 10 years.
โAnd during that time, the National Marine Mammal Foundation was established. So I transitioned over to the foundation, still providing support to the Navyโs marine mammal program and working with the animals. And then I transitioned more in the business administration and organizational advancement space.โ
Quigley has worked at NMMF for six years.
โI grew up in Philadelphia,โ he said. โI always had an interest in wildlife and marine mammals. So I went to school, moved to South Carolina, went to Coastal Carolina University of Myrtle Beach, got a bachelorโs degree in marine science. I was lucky enough to get an internship in Charleston with the NOAAโs National Ocean Service. And thatโs where I met the guys that still work here today.โ
The NMMFโs Charleston administrative location is a nondescript office on Johns Island, but the tools inside hold the key to modern dolphin research and rescue. While the office is adorned with nautical maps of Charleston and posters chronicling NMMF discoveries, the heart of the office is a supply room with incredible technology โ an arrow used to gather samples of dolphin blubber, a drone used for tracking and tags of all sorts. All are used to uncover the mysteries of these beautiful creatures.
โIn San Diego, the headquarters sounds really exciting,โ Martz said. โBut in reality, we have a tiny office, itโs actually smaller than the one that youโre in right now. The Charleston field station feels huge.โ
Quigley said the team at the Charleston field office had a long history in the area already โ and serious experience.
โOur biologists had been studying the local [dolphin] population here since the mid 1990s as part of the NOAA lab at Fort Johnson, Hollings Marine Laboratory.โ
Meet NMMF at SEWE
The NMMF is becoming more involved in Charleston with its participation in the Southeastern Wildlife Exposition. Last summer, Quigley and Martz met SEWE President and CEO John Powell and were invited to collaborate this year.
Quigley recently provided a sneak peek into the exhibit.

โPrograms at SEWE will give you a glimpse of the work we do to conduct dolphin population assessments and rescue individual animals in need,โ he said. โOur Dolphin Doctor program, which will happen twice per day at Marion Square, will engage the audience in a typical rescue effort. Itโll kind of walk you from the first step of us getting a call saying, โHey, thereโs a dolphin entangled.โ
โThen over the course of that rescue, weโll explain to the audience all the different tools that we use to assess that animalโs health. So things like blood sampling, ultrasound evaluations, X-rays. Thereโs a whole list of tools that weโre excited to share with everybody and describe to the audience.โ
Quigley said the NMMF also would present short films and offer each night of SEWE at Charleston Gaillard Center โwhere you can meet our team and learn more about our conservation efforts here and around the world.
โFour films [will] highlight the work that we do. Itโll talk more specifically about the stuff we do locally and the rescue efforts. And then itโs going to talk about what we do on a global scale.โ
NMMFโs role around
the world
The NMMF is currently involved in 30 major projects with more than 50 collaborators, such as the U.S. Navy Marine Mammal Program, NOAA, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and dozens of nonprofits.

These partnerships often result in remarkable โ and sometimes troubling โ new science. One recent discovery came from an investigation into the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. The NMMFโs team, which researched dolphins in an area with heavy oil exposure from the spill, found dolphins with an unprecedented array of chronic health issues. These dolphins suffered from โlung disease, poor body condition, impaired stress response and low reproductive success that have persisted for years since the spill,โ Quigley said. But the research led to development of new techniques to help dolphin populations and improve their health and well-being.
Discoveries help lawmakers, too.
โWeโre really trusted by other international organizations and institutions to be that neutral, unbiased entity,โ Martz said. โThereโs the factor, especially with conservation biology, and assessing the impacts of noise and human related activities on marine mammals. Our scientists share that with policymakers so we donโt create the policy, but we provide the scientific information for those decision makers to do exactly that.โ
The NMMF offers exhibits during SEWE in Marion Square. Learn more at: nmmf.org.
Lucy Dixon is a senior at James Island Charter High School where she is editor of the schoolโs newspaper.
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SEWE event picks
The 2023 Southeastern Wildlife Exposition (SEWE) offers dozens of events Feb. 16-19 in various downtown locations.



