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Meet the IFAW Seal Team


David Lavigne
Science Advisor, IFAW Canada



David LavigneDavid Lavigne is science advisor to the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW). From 1973-1996, he was a professor in the Department of Zoology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.  After receiving his BSc in Zoology from the University of Western Ontario in 1968, he taught high school for one year before entering graduate school at the University of Guelph, completing an MSc in 1972 and a PhD in 1974, both for work on vision in seals.  Remaining at Guelph as a faculty member, his research interests shifted, initially to problems of censusing harp seals to estimate annual pup production and population size.  By 1975, the focus of his research was pinniped bioenergetics.  For the latter work he earned a Dr philos degree from the University of Oslo in 1988.  Currently, his major interests are in the areas of conservation biology, wildlife management, and natural resources policy.  

 

Sheryl Fink
Senior Research and Projects Specialist, IFAW Canada



Sheryl FinkSheryl Fink is a Senior Research and Projects Specialist working out of the Guelph (Canada) office of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW).  She has a BSc in Wildlife Biology from the University of Guelph.  Sheryl has been studying Canada’s commercial seal hunt since 1994. She began working for the International Marine Mammal Association (an IFAW organization) in 1998, and has worked for IFAW since 2000.   Sheryl has worked on IFAW’s seal campaign for 10 years. As a researcher, she closely follows the latest scientific research and other ongoing developments surrounding the Canadian seal hunt. She has been part of IFAW’s on-ice seal hunt observation team for 6 years, and is currently a spokesperson for the seal campaign in Canada. She is also the author of IFAW’s annual publication Seals and Sealing in Canada.  Most recently she was the Associate Editor of Gaining Ground: In Pursuit of Ecological Sustainability, which was published by the IFAW and the University of Limerick in June 2006.

 

Dr. Ralf Sonntag
Country Director, IFAW Germany



Dr. Ralf SonntagDr. Ralf Sonntag joined IFAW as Director of the German office in Hamburg in August 2003. After completing his PhD as a Marine Biologist at University of Bremen on aspects of the 1988 seal die-off in the North Sea, he worked for several years on the German Small Cetacean Project as a scientist at the University of Kiel.  He was a member of scientific committees of the International Whaling Commission (IWC) and of the Agreement on the Conservation of Small Cetaceans of the Baltic and North Seas (ASCOBANS). He was very involved in the initiative for the establishment of a whale sanctuary for small cetaceans around the German North Sea Islands Sylt and Amrum.

After his work at the Universities of Bremen and Kiel, Dr. Sonntag took up a job for Greenpeace Germany, where he had already been an honorary team member for ten years. During this time he also played an active role in international high seas campaigns to fight pirate fisheries in waters of Antarctica; TBT pollution of the North Sea; and Norwegian whaling in the North Atlantic. Before beginning his career with IFAW, Dr. Sonntag was Campaigns Director with the animal welfare organization “Vier Pfoten”. 

 

Robbie Marsland
Country Director, IFAW United Kingdom



Robbie MarslandRobbie Marsland joined IFAW in December 2002 as Head of Campaigns and Communications and became Director of the UK office in July 2006. Robbie leads a team of 35 dedicated staff working from London, working primarily on campaigns to end commercial whaling, to stop the Canadian seal hunt, to protect elephants and other endangered species from commercial trade, and to ensure the Hunting Act is enforced.

 

 

 

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IFAW-Robbenkampagne im Rückblick
2006 Eine Million Robben getötet
1996 Fangquote gestiegen
1987 Kommerzielle Jagd auf Whitecoats verboten
1983 Einfuhrverbot für weiße Robbenfelle
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Why IFAW Seit den 60er Jahren setzt sich der IFAW dafür ein, das grausame Abschlachten von Robben zu beenden. 1985 konnte er ein Einfuhrverbot für weiße Felle von neugeborenen Robben erreichen. Heute ist der IFAW mit Büros in 15 Ländern eine der führenden Tierschutzorganisationen der Welt. Selbstverständlich auch in Kanada.
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