Skip to content
  • Home
  • Projects

    US Mainland

    North Puget Sound Gray Whales
    Stranding response
    Pacific Coast Feeding Group (PCFG) gray whales
    Return of humpback whales to the Salish Sea
    Humpback and Blue Whale Photo-ID
    Delphinid-Behavioral Response Study
    SOCAL-Behavioral Response Study
    Blue whale ship strikes

    Hawaiʻi

    Hawaiian Cetacean Studies
    Updates from the field
    Hawaiian Dolphin and Whale Species
    Blainville’s beaked whales
    Bottlenose dolphins
    Cross seamount beaked whales
    Goose-beaked (Cuvier’s beaked) whales
    Dwarf and pygmy sperm whales
    Gray whales
    False killer whales
    Fin whales
    Fraser’s dolphins
    Humpback whales
    Killer whales
    Longman’s beaked whales
    Melon-headed whales
    Minke Whales
    Pantropical spotted dolphins
    Pygmy killer whales
    Risso’s dolphins
    Rough-toothed dolphins
    Short-finned pilot whales
    Sei whales
    Sperm whales
    Spinner dolphins
    Striped dolphins
    Publications from our work
    Hawaiian Pelagic Cephalopods
    Hawaiian Sea Turtles
    Hawaiian Seabirds
    Conservation

    Initiatives

    Providing Cameras for Fishermen to Support Photo-ID Efforts
    Finmount Satellite Tags to Aid Stranding Response
    MARINE Committee

    Archives

  • Publications
  • About

    About Us

    Directions to Cascadia
    Comments by Cascadia Research on proposed government actions
    Contact Us
    Statement of Qualifications
    Donate to Cascadia

    Staff

    Our Team
    Our Interns
    Graduate Student Positions at Cascadia
    Positions at Cascadia

    Collaboration

    Cascadia’s Collaborators
    Community Science at Cascadia
    Graduate Students

The Emergence of Mucormycosis in Free-Ranging Marine Mammals of the Pacific Northwest

Primary fungal diseases in marine mammals are rare. Mucormycosis, a disease caused by fungi of the order Mucorales, has been

Read More

Acoustic Observation of the Reaction of Rough-Toothed Dolphin (Steno bredanensis) to Vocalizations, Most Likely from Killer Whales (Orcinus orca), off Kauaʻi

Read More

Host-Derived Population Genomics Data Provides Insights into Bacterial and Diatom Composition of the Killer Whale Skin

Recent exploration into the interactions and relationship between hosts and their microbiota has revealed a connection between many aspects of

Read More

Noise Levels Received by Endangered Killer Whales Orcinus orca Before and After Implementation of Vessel Regulations

Whale watching is often conducted from motorized vessels, which contribute to underwater noise pollution and can disturb marine mammals. Protective

Read More

Keep In Touch

Twitter Facebook-f Youtube Tiktok Instagram
Support Our Work

About Us

  • Directions to Cascadia
  • Comments by Cascadia Research on proposed government actions
  • Contact Us
  • Statement of Qualifications
  • Donate to Cascadia
Menu
  • Directions to Cascadia
  • Comments by Cascadia Research on proposed government actions
  • Contact Us
  • Statement of Qualifications
  • Donate to Cascadia

Staff

  • Our Team
  • Our Interns
  • Graduate Student Positions at Cascadia
  • Positions at Cascadia
Menu
  • Our Team
  • Our Interns
  • Graduate Student Positions at Cascadia
  • Positions at Cascadia

Find us