Lisa Taylor Ballance is an American marine scientist who is the Director of the Marine Mammal Institute and Endowed Chair for Marine Mammal Research at Oregon State University.
Ballance with killer whale calf in the southern Ross Sea, Antarctica, on a NOAA expedition in 2007
Ballance joined the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).[6] Her research has focused on seabirds and cetaceans. She held various positions at the NOAA, including Chair of the Pacific Seabird Group, Lead of Cetacean Ecology and Chief of Stenella Abundance Research.[5]
In 2013, Balance was appointed Chair of the NOAA Fisheries National Seabird Program. The overarching aim of the program was to mitigate bycatch (the unwanted fish caught by commercial fishing nets) and to promote seats as indicates of ecosystem health.[7] She led the Eastern Tropical Pacific Research Program, which was responsible for the “Dolphin Safe” label found on canned tuna.[8]
Ballance was made Professor of Fisheries and Wildlife and Director of the Marine Mammal Research Institute at Oregon State University in 2019.[5][8][9] She led expeditions to see beaked whales[10] and dolphins.[11] She was awarded a $2 million grant to collect information about the distribution of marine mammals.[12]
On July 23, 2024, President Joe Biden nominated Ballance to be a Member of the Marine Mammal Commission.[13]
Selected publications
E., Redfern, J. V. Ferguson, M. C. Becker, E. A. Hyrenbach, K. D. Good, Caroline P. Barlow, J. Kaschner, K. Baumgartner, Mark F. Forney, K. A. Ballance, L. T. Fauchald, P. Halpin, Patrick N. Hamazaki, T. Pershing, A. J. Qian, Song S. Read, Andrew J. Reilly, S. B. Torres, L. Werner, Francisco (April 22, 2011). Techniques for cetacean–habitat modeling. Inter-Research. OCLC719108343.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
↑Ballance, Lisa T (1987). Ecology and behavior of the bottlenose dolphin, Tursiops truncatus, in the Gulf of California, Mexico (Thesis). OCLC17573466.
↑Ballance, Lisa T (1993). Community ecology and flight energetics in tropical seabirds of the eastern Pacific: energetic correlates of guild structure (Thesis). OCLC54995633.