The A Level Biologist Podcasts
TAB Podcasts brings the most diverse set of experiences and people in life science. Scientists, business people, educators, investors and healthcare professionals all live here. Based on the first A level biology hub in the world, TAB Podcasts jumps on the podcast as the most entertaining medium to share the most exciting area in the world. Your host, Arian Mirzarafie Ahi, boasts a dizzying breadth of life science experience across academia, research, business and communication. Beyond the standard qualifications and work experience, it is the people and places which most inspired Arian that make it to TAB Podcasts. Arian climbed those ladders so you donāt have to. All you have to do is tune in.
The A Level Biologist Podcasts
š³ Lucie's Reef Relief
International marine conservation policy maker Lucie Guirkinger takes us on a trip around 58 countries, deep-diving into the life in Earth's oceans and what it takes to help it thrive.
Learn more about Lucie at https://www.linkedin.com/in/lucieguirkinger/ on twitter @lucieguirk and instagram @luliguirk
Full transcript: https://thealevelbiologist.co.uk/lucies-reef-relief/
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Intro
Arian Hi guys, howās it going? Did you know that upon your death and cremation, your ashes can be fed into a baby tree so that it grows on your remains? Didnāt see that coming, did ya? āŖ tune
Shallow Waters
Arian Welcome to this podcast about marine conservation. This episodeās special guest is Lucie Guirkinger, an international marine conservation policy maker. I like showcasing the fantastic people doing inspirational work in biology, and I am lucky to be part of a great network of professionals that makes it easy for me to chat with the interesting people and projects that come my way. In this case, quite literally came my way as Lucie joined our house share by chance.
After discovering more about her work, it became obvious that our wonderful audience ā yes, you ā would love to hear about it. Lucie has worked in marine conservation policy for over a decade, from coral conservation in the Dominican Republic, to more recently supporting policy for the United Nations and joining maritime affairs of the European Commission. Lucie, welcome to the podcast! ā¦yes!
Lucie [laughter] I thought you were going to cut by segment.
Arian Well, welcome to the podcast.
Lucie Thank you, welcome guys! Iām really happy to be here.
Arian ā¦and welcome to Cambridge again; because you used to live in Cambridge before, didnāt you?
Lucie I did, I did my Masterās here, yeah. So Iām back in the town.
Arian Thatās nice. Normally, I choose the fun facts for the intro and the outro; and this time, I asked Lucie to maybe share some. Sheās worked really hard to actually find some extra fun facts. So, why did you find out?
Lucie So, I think my first fun fact which is actually more an interesting fact than a fun fact is that there are more historic artefacts under the sea than in any part of the world. Apparently, there are already 1,000 shipwrecks off Florida Keys alone. So imagine the number of historical artefacts around the world!
Arian Wow.
Lucie And thatās my first fact, yeah.
Arian Did you like my intro fun fact?
Lucie What was it?
Arian About the trees.
Lucie Yeah! I mean I gave it to you!
Arian Yeah, that was yours, and I said, yeah, this is a good fun fact. But the extra ones that you found were interesting as well. Is anyone going to check out the shipwrecks?
Lucie I mean I know that shipwrecks are really interesting places for divers to go check out because they host so many like animals, you know, fish and corals and stuff.
Arian Do they? Are the really deep?
Lucie Not necessarily, depends, like some are really 20 m deep, or others are like 40-50 m and you really have to have many tanks on you, and you know, be an actual professional to go see them. But I remember last year we went with my family to Jordan and really off the the coast, like 10 m next to the shore there was a shipwreck.
Arian You could see it from the surface?
Lucie Yeah!
Arian Oh wow. So I guess a lot of tourists could just go there.
Lucie Yeahā¦
Arian And steal the buried treasures.
Lucie Yeah, exactly.
āŖ tune
Diving into Marine Conservation
Arian So normally at the end of the podcast I just say the final fun fact and then I say Byeeee. And then the other person say bye. But they never realise that they have to say that, so they just sit there in silence. This is the first time Iāve said welcome andā¦
Lucie [laughter]
Arian And the other person also sat in silence.
Lucie Because I donāt know if itās a test, or you just want to start another segment.
Arian Most guests, they get that one, theyāre like Oh, hello, yeah, welcome.
Lucie ā¦I was just likeā¦
Arian Hopefully youāll get the final bye at the end, weāll see how it goes. I was just gonna ask some random questions here, actually; which is whatās the best city that youāve lived in so far?
Lucie Wow, thatās a very interesting question. Because I think every place has its positive sides and its negative sides. I thinkā¦
Arian And youāre moving to London in a few days as well.
Lucie Exactly. Iām moving to london in a few days just to have that London experience, even though with covid itās not ideal, itās not really, you know living the London life. But honestly, like the only city thatās popping in my mind is like, you know, my favourite place is probably Santo Domingo in Dominican Republic; because I think I was there when I was 17-18, and you know the life there was absolutely amazing, itās hot, itās sunny, thereās a lot of activities to do, and the ocean was so close to me that I think that really made it the best city to live in.
Arian Iāve never been there, that sounds amazing. So, where did you complete you school education?
Lucie I completed it in Dominican Republic, actually. I was the last 2 years there, and I was actually in a British school, and I did theā¦ how do you call it? How do you freaking call it?
Arian A-levels, GCSE?
Lucie Noā¦ the other oneā¦ IB! the IB.
Arian IBā¦
Lucie Andā¦ but it was, I mean, it was funny but at that time it was a bit sad because in the country, in the only school they had and where I was, they didnāt have all the courses you could take for the IB. And I needed biology, like high level, to go do my studies in the UK. But they didnāt have it in the country.
Arian They didnāt do biology?
Lucie They didnāt do biology high level.
Arian Was it not enough people applying to do it?
Lucie Yeah, I think most people just wanted to do, you know, end up doing business management, so of course biology is not what theyāre looking for. And the thing is, like when I went to then go to study in the UK, I couldnāt, I had to do a foundation year because I didnāt have the chance to do this high level biology.
Arian So you did 4 years instead of 3.
Lucie Exactly. Yeah.
Arian A lot of people do that, who for some reason donāt have A-levels or the qualifications. I guess the first, the foundation year is similar to that qualification, or is itā¦
Lucie Itās literally like retaking the last year of school. I really didnāt learn much more and I think what I learn that year wasnāt that useful for my actual studies, so I feel it was a bit, yeah, not very useful.
[laughter]
Arian Good to know. So did you set out to do the work that you did, or did it just find you?
Lucie No, I mean, Iāve always been so passionate about animals that I alwaysā¦ and itās true that at the beginning, you know, when I was really young I wanted to be a farmer, like have my farm with my little animals. I was like OK, always animals.
And then, as I grew up I was like no, Iām gonna be a veterinarian, and Iām gonna save the cats and the dogs, because those are animals that, you know, I absolutely love, and so many people around us have like pets. But then when I discovered that part of that job was to also kill animals, right, like euthanise them, as a vet, I was like I cannot do that.
Arian Is that a big part of the job?
Lucie As a vet, yeah. Like, you have so many animals that come in that are old and sick and you know, people just donāt wanna see them suffer, and most of the time they justā¦
Arian So, how come we do that with the pets but not with people? Whatās the difference?
Lucie Because thereās a whole moral dilemma behind it. In the Netherlands you can do it. A friend of my mumās, she asked to be euthanised. And itās whole process, it takes years, you have to fill in certain requirements to be able to be euthanised, and she was euthanised. So, yeah, it depends a bit on yourā¦ Moral and conscience.
Arian So, essentially, for the pets itās just a case of, letās not have them have a disease and die, letās just, like euthanise them.
Lucie Exactly, just kind of minimise their pain. But anyway, so then I decided to study zoology. Because I didnāt really know what animals, or what realm I would like to specialise in. And I really found my passion within marine biology. Both because that was always my favourite course, but also because my dad for as long as I remember, has always taken us to go like snorkelling, swimming, sailing, and Iāve always had this like close connection to the ocean.
And I just love the fact that the ocean is such a mysterious place. Itās so hard for humans to actually access it, itās actually really hard for us to dive really really deep, and that;s why, you know, thereās so much of the ocean we still donāt know. And yeah, I think itās kind of a passion that grew bigger and bigger, basically.
Arian That sounds amazing, so you went from farming to being a vet, to zoology.
Lucie Yeah. And then to actual marine biology.
Arian Were there any challenges in like, pursuing that trajectory, or was it just like, yeah, I wanna do this, and then you just did it?
Lucie Yeah, honestly, I think it was basically easy to just want to do marine biology because like you have those courses at university. But I donāt think, I honestly think like 20 years ago, or 30 years ago, it was maybe harder to go into that.
But no, not anymore, I think like now, with climate change and all the impacts that climate change is having on the environment, there are more and more courses like at bachelor level, at masterās level that just really focus on that, on environmental studies. So I think itās just getting easier for people basically to pursue their passion.
Arian Thatās really good. For a lot of places itās the opposite where it used to be easy, and now itās overcrowded and thereās a lot of people applying to do things. And thereās just too many people and not enough placements and opportunities.
Lucie Yeah.
Arian So for this, itās the other way around, itās like opening up to people.
Lucie Yeah, but itās still super like competitive field, like itās really hard to find a position as a marine biologist, in marine related stuff. Either if itās as a researcher or is at government level, like organisation level, itās super hard. Because there are so many more marine biologists than there are posts for it.
Arian So in that sense it is similar, that is the frustration.
Lucie Exactly, yeah. The more the people, the harder it is to get a job position.
Arian Well, letās find out more in just a second.
āŖ tune
Round World Trip to Dwarf Minke Whales
Arian What would listeners be surprised to know about your work?
Lucie Actually, I feel like a lot of people assume that we know everything about the marine environment. They think of a fish or they think of a marine fact and theyāre like oh, can you tell me more about this? But generally, like, we know so little about our field because itās so huge and expansive. And I think thatās maybe somehow surprising for some people. And also, I get a lot when I say Iām a marine biologist, they always ask me, oh so you work in an aquarium? Or you work at a museum.
Like you know, they donāt think that marine biology is much more than that. Like I can work for the government to have them in legislation, and setting up marine conservation zones, or work for NGOs and you know, conserve species on the ground, and also including communities in it. So I think thatās also sometimes surprises people.
Arian Yeah. Itās interesting that you say that about people just assuming that you work in an aquarium. I knew someone who worked like, in a zoo for a while. And they thought what a wonderful way to help animals and have people visiting, and teaching them and making it an educational experience for people. And she said, after a while it just became obvious thatās not what it was for, and the kids didnāt really care, they were just running around. And the animals werenāt having a good time or anything, so she just quit her job after that.
Lucie Yeah, I think, well when I did my bachelor in zoology and I said Iām a zoologist, thatās straight up I was put into that box oh, youāre gonna work at a zoo, you know, but itās so much broader than that. But yeah, just talking about zoos, I personally donāt like zoos because you have just animals, basically caged and you just, there to see them and thatās it. They donāt have the area that they used to in the wild, and I think thatās not really ideal for the species. But at the same time, you know you have many zoos that have those programmes, conservation programmes to breed the species and try to put them back in the wild, which I think is a good idea, but I know that itās pretty hard to actually achieve that.
Arian Yeah. And, you say people expect you to know everything and we, and there is so much that we genuinely donāt know, and I saw this weird marine creature the other day, featured in this really nice magazine, I forget what itās called, like a spiral tube of 15 m that has, like it contracts in the shape of a spiral to move, to propel itself. And itās got these spikes that poke out. And apparently the magazine was asking local divers to try to dive in and like, take out like a golf ball sized chunk of this animal to like, extract its DNA and like, study its genome. And then I thought, they said a small golf sized chunk and I thought, golf ball, like, a golf ball is kind of not that small. But then I went back and it said 15 m, I was like OK, fine.
[laughter]
Arian This thingās huge. Thatās fine, you know.
Lucie Exactly. No, I, see, I donāt even know what youāre on about.
[laughter]
Arian [laughter]
Lucie I and I remember, as well, I was swimming in the ocean in the Caribbean, and I saw this kind of blob, kind of moving about, and I was like what is this? And then, you know I went back home, and I googled it, and it was actually a sea slug. And I just had no idea what they looked like, because thereās a difference also what you see as images, to actually seeing the animal in the water kind of moving in such weird ways. So yeah, thereāsā¦ but thatās what I love about it, thereās still so much to learn about it and see.
Arian Yeah. Thereās all these weird-shaped species that just look very alien but theyāre actually on Earth. And theyāre all different, all around the world. Youāve been to a lot of different places. Like a lot of different countries.
Lucie Yeah.
Arian What countries have you been to?
Lucie Well, too many to really just, you know, how do you say itā¦
Arian List?
Lucie List them, exactly. I think I calculated the other day that Iāve been to 58 countries.
Arian 58?
Lucie Yeah, so Iām so excited cos Iām 2 countries away from 60. [laughter] yeah.
Arian Wow, thatās amazing! So you actually canāt list them.
Lucie I could, but it would take the whole podcast to list them.
[laughter]
Arian Fair enough, OK. Start listing them, and Iāll stop you if it gets too long.
Lucie OK. So letās start with North America, so Iāve been to Canada, US, then South so Mexico, Costa Rica, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Bonaire, then Colombia, not Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Argentina, then if you go to Africa, Benin, Togo, Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Eswatini, if we go to Europe, wowā¦
Arian East..?
Lucie Eswatini. Now itās not called Swaziland anymore, itās called Eswatini.
Arian How do you spell that?
Lucie Like e, and then s, w, a, t, i, n, i.
Arian I didnāt know that, when did this happen?
Lucie In 2018, 2019?
Arian Oh my god, this is like weāre living history, like
Lucie Yeah itās really recent.
Arian Itās mad. So why did it change, does it mean anything?
Lucie I mean because Swaziland was such a white European word, and they finally gained independence I think and now itās Eswatini. Iām actually not sure, will have to check. It changed names, yeah. I had a friend actually yesterday she was like, Swaziland, and really in the conversation I didnāt have the chance to tell her like, now itās called Eswatini, but itās very interesting how, you know, even in my head Iām like countries are named like this, theirā¦
Arian Itās just a fact.
Lucie Exactly. But when you look at older maps you see how the borders have changed and fluctuated so dramatically. Itās just very interesting.
Arian Yeah, theyāre all constructs.
Lucie Yeah. And then in Europe, wow, so Ireland, do I say Scotland? Or do I just say UK?
[laughter]
Arian This listing thing is more complicated than we first thought.
Lucie Yes.
Arian If you say UK, then Scotland is part of it.
Lucie OK then, UK. Cos Iāve been to Wales as well. So I guess all UK. Portugal, Spain, Italy, France, Switzerland, Austria, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Poland, Germany, Czechia, Lithuania, Slovenia, Croatia, ah! Not Serbia, the other oneā¦ Slovakia, do they say that? Slovakia, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, and I think thatās it for Europe. And Russia. And then Middle East, oh and Northern Africa, sorry I forgot. So Morocco, Jordan, thatās it for that area. Then Australia, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia.
Arian Youāve visited almost 60 countries, you definitely timed that right. Because if you tried to do that now you probably wouldnātā¦
Lucie It would be pretty complicated, yes.
Arian Itās a good thing you got in so many countries in the part of the century where people could actually travel.
Lucie Yes, but I think itās going to start opening up again fairly soon I hope.
Arian Hopefully. Was your experience of marine conservation different in all these continents and countries?
Lucie I think it was different because I was doing different things. Like, when I was in Australia, so I was there for 6 months as part of a semester in marine biology and ecology that I was doing at James Cook University which is based in Townsville, Northern Australia. I actually volunteered for several organisations and also for researchers and so, I was volunteering for the dwarf minke whale project.
So the dwarf minke whales are dwarf size of minke whales [laughter] which are found like all along the coast of Australia and migrate to really south to the Antarctic. And for me like it was a magical experience because, more in the part of the field work because, the desk work was all about identifying species, identifying if individuals, like see how many we observed like per year in a season, how may were calves, how many were adults, and that was like really based on comparing photographic evidence of each of the seasons, so it takes a long time, like they donāt have, they havenāt developed software yet where you can just put the pictures up and the software just processes it and tells you OK, like from 2016 to 2017 we still see the same I donāt know, 10-year old whale.
But what was really fascinating for me was really the field work part of it where I was a week on a boat, like a week-long riverboat and we went throughout the northern part of the Great Barrier Reef, and it was actually fantastic because basically those touristic boats allowed researchers to go on board to carry out the field work, because all the have the money to have field work with our own expenses, and it was both inspiring people on board about our work and about whales, how fantastic they are, trying to get donations from them as well.
And, on the other side of it was just to actually, being on the ground with the whales, like swimming with whales, and take pictures of them, to be able to identify them later. And what is actually very interesting about dwarf minke whales is that theyāre very curious creatures, like theyāre one of the most curious whales you can find around you. And they would pass literally 1 m away, and you could see in their eyes they were looking at you and it was just like wow.
Arian [laughter] you had a moment.
Lucie Yeah, basically. No, it was actually fantastic and you had like a group of 10 whales and sometimes Iāve heard that theyāve had like 40-50 whales.
Arian Are you sure that you were studying them or were they studying you?
Lucie [laughter] Thatās such a good question, I definitely think they were also like studying us, you know, like the way they were so curious about us. Thereās also a very strict protocol to follow when you do whale watching. In our case you had a rope tied to the boat and you had to hang onto the rope and they really advise you not to move, not to do any likeā¦ drastic movements.
Arian Sudden movements?
Lucie Sudden moves, exactly. Because you could scare the whales and when you scare an animal, what happens? Either they become aggressive or you know, itās always a drastic reaction. Not that it has ever happened, but you know always wanna avoid that. And I think thatās something that people donāt really understand.
To really keep distance from wild animals. Iām sure youāve heard of many people thatā¦ I think the most recent one was someone kayaking and the whale breached onto the boat because the person was 1 m away from the whale and they werenāt expecting the whale to come back up and open its mouth, and obviously feed on fish that were around.
And I think itās always very important to at least stay 20 m away from the whales or from whatever, turtle or dolphin or whatever you see, and let them come to you. Remain fairly relaxed, and just let them come to you; but if they donāt, donāt chase them.
Arian Yeah, some people donāt take that advice. YouTube recommended me a video, āHow to survive being swallowed by a whaleā
Lucie [laughter]
Arian It had steps, you know, it said make sure youāve got like a suit that is going to withstand the stomach acid of the whale, curl up into a ball so that youāre less likely to be touched by the teeth and like, slashed. And donāt panic, itās gonna be very dark in there.
I think thatās just a joke [laughter] thatās impossible. I mean, of course I know they have huge mouths and a human could fit in it, but I think, honestly you would just have enough time to justā¦ get out.
Arian Youād just die. No, I thinkā¦
Lucie The whale wouldnāt close its mouth and just keep you there.
Arian [laughter] it was based on this guy who was swallowed, but then immediately spat out. So obviously thatās not the same but he basically said āI survived being eaten by a whaleā.
Lucie Yeah, I justā¦ yeah. I donāt think itās a good idea, please donāt do it. [laughter]
Arian [laughter]
OK, so weāll find out how to build a more sustainable marine environment coming up next.
āŖ tune
Making Change Profitable
Arian What is the greatest challenge in achieving progress in creating a more environmentally friendly and sustainable world
Lucie So, I mean I think thatās definitely a super quick question. And I think the main challenge is to really get every sector on board. Because so far you have certain groups of citizens in society or of course, people working in environmental conservation that are really trying to achieve this progress, but when you think about it at a political level or economic level, itās generally, thereās no interest basically to really integrate conservation.
Because, of course, the first thing you think is when I clear a forest or when I dredge on the seabed, like what I get out, minerals or whatever, itās much more valuable than whatever was there before. But I think that is actually really changing more because of the covid crisis, the covid pandemic. People are really realising that nature provides us with so many benefits that are very very hard to value economically. But these models are really being created to really have an idea of the actual value and that is really the focus of conservation at the moment; is to really find the value of, I donāt know.
For example, I was reading some papers about mangroves and how in Thailand for example, thereās a bit surge of agriculture practices to be able to rear shrimps and then sell them worldwide. And although they say, OK, so shrimp farming is giving us a billion dollars in benefits per year, whereas if you just leave the mangroves like that, itās just about a million dollars benefit, they didnāt take into account so many aspects that the mangroves have, you know like they provide shelter for like birds, and many other mammals, they provide food for fuels and local communities, like communities really rely on mangroves for fisheries as well, and so thatās also a major driver of economic growth right, because if you have people going into poverty then thatās not helpful to the economy.
But I think also, one of the main challenges is the economic system where itās of course much more based on profit and on single use, and I think weāll really have to tackle this to really be able to have more sustainable lives.
Arian Thank you. No, thatās really good. So essentially, itās about bringing to light and being explicit about the things that weāve just ignored and have just been invisible.
Lucie Exactly. Yeah.
Arian Iāve seen that you worked on like a label, like a sustainability thing. What was that about?
Lucie Yeah so, very recently I was doing a traineeship at the European Commission with the maritime affairs and fisheries department of the European Commission. And they have a regulation about fisheriesā products and how to label them. You know like where they were caught, the size, the species name; and itās pretty outdated, like I think it was, it came out in 1980. And of course, with the whole problem of sustainable fisheries, they want to implement this regulation whereā¦
So itās not a label, because a label and regulations differ, like labels kind ofā¦ I mean, they didnāt really want a label because then it would bring some conflicts. But yeah, and it was really about integrating the dangers that fish are sustaining from these unsustainable fisheries and try to integrate that into regulations. So for example, what kind of nets have they used to fish that species? Because, for example the trawl nets which are dragged along the sea floor; they really damage the whole sea floor, and completely destroy the ecosystem.
So for example, if you buy a fish that you know, on the labels they would have to put OK, so they used a trawl net to fish that species, so itās environmentally not friendly. So thatās what they try to integrate at EU level, but itās really hard because they want to do it per species and the problem is thereās not enough data or some people donāt want to share the data and it has to be publicly available and thatās really hard to obtain because there arenāt publicly available data bases.
But I just do hope that even if it starts with a very basic system we can only just really grow and you know, develop that system. So I really hope itās gonna be put in place so that also all the countries in the world can also develop their own sustainable fishery system.
Arian Thatās amazing. Letās find out what Lucieās work looks like, day to day, coming up.
āŖ tune
Making Marine Moves
Arian What are the biggest tools that you use in your work?
Lucie So, right now, I work at UNEP-WCMC and we work with 11 countries worldwide and we support these countries to implement environmental regulation into their national legislations. One of the biggest tools that we use actually is PowerPoint [laughter] because we carry out workshops with them to introduce them to the assessments that they can use at the country level to understand what kind of ecosystems they have in their country, to find out what policy they will need to effectively protect those environments.
So in those workshops we have that about these assessments, how to find those key policy questions that they need to answer, what kind of people they have to talk to, to gain that knowledge basically. And we want it to be as integrative as possible, is that a word, integrative? [laughter]
Arian To have integrityā¦
Lucie Yeah, like to have as many stakeholders involved as possible basically. You know, from indigenous communities to political leaders to youth organisations, because for anything to really be accepted by society, you need to have society involved in what you do, right? And so through these workshops as well, we use this tool called Miro Boards andā¦
Arian I know Miro Boards, some people showed me Miro.
Lucie Yeah! Itās really cool, I actually just learned how to use it through this job. Itās basically a tool that allows you to for example, add post-its. You know itās kind of a digital whiteboard basically. People can just like share ideas or just write down whatever they know about certain subjects or certain ideas. Yeah, so thatās the main tools that we use: PowerPoint, Miro, nothing out of this world.
Arian So you donāt need to physically be in an office.
Lucie No, but itās difficult to engage with many stakeholders during this pandemic, because of course the government officials, or people who have access to the internet, like internet and a laptop, itās very easy but a question that we have from some countries is how do I engage with stakeholders from, that are living in remote areas of the country?
That donāt necessarily have internet, and itās very hard to, at this time to really give them and answer, we say you can give them a phone call, or obviously itās also country-dependent. Some countries have less lockdown measures or, so in this case they can actually go to those communities and talk to the indigenous leaders or local leaders.
Arian Is that something that youāre going to have to do?
Lucie No, because what we do is really provide the tools and guidance on how to carry out those assessments. Who to contact, and we really support them throughout the process. But at the end, we really want to encourage this in-country expertise, and in-country work. For them themselves to really engage with their different stakeholder groups.
Arian Do different disciplines go into your work? Is it like a very interdisciplinary sort of field? Lucie Do you have to work with specialists from other areas?
It depends. Right now, it really depends on the country. Some countries, they wanna focus their assessments on letās say marine ecosystems, so then you have expertise in fisheries that carry out this assessment; other countries are just more interested in forest ecosystems, so then you will have this kind of expertise involved in the assessment.
But generally still within the environmental realm of expertise, not really economic or financial, but this assessment really seeks to be integrated later, not only as an environmental policy, but across sectors as well. So at the end you do have other experts at the later stage that sill be really involved with that policy to make sure that itās effectively integrated within the legislation.
Arian Uh-uh. You did some really interesting work with, I think, was that in the Dominican Republic, you were working with local women to teach them how to do, how to do something?
Lucie So that was actually in Papua New Guinea.
Arian Papua New Guinea.
Lucie Yeah, with the Coral Sea Foundation. And itās actually fantastic because they really are encouraging more of a bottom-up approach, where itās the local communities that really decide, you know, what areas they wanna conserve, how big the area is going to be, and once that is decided, of course within the community, then we trained women to monitor like the status of those marine protected areas.
And engage with the community, and you know kind of giving them this feedback of how well the environment is going.
Arian So you didnāt give them a fish, you just taught them how to fish.
Lucie Yeah, pretty much. [laughter]
Arian [laughter]
Lucie No, as in like, itās really just teaching them how to snorkel, how to put transects on the corals, and for example identify where thereās like just sand, corals, seagrass, and from there justā¦ they can just come back to our project leaders and ask them you know, for example, this is degrading like what we can do to preserve this certain environment.
But itās great because in those communities, women are generally not, donāt have such an equal space within this community, so the fact that they are now in charge of such and important aspect of their livelihoods, because theyāre very dependent on fisheries, it really brings out this equality level between men and women.
Arian What was their feedback?
Lucie Honestly, that they really felt much more empowered, women felt much more free to have a say in the community and I think that just, overall make them very yeah, just happy at the end, you know when your voice is heard.
And also more as a general, more like a general level, they were also happy that they could see their reefs degrading, and fish being more scarce than before, and just being able to see a difference with having these marine areas really kind of brought relief to the whole community as well.
Arian Brought reliefā¦ trying to make a joke about reef, relief. Reefā¦
Lucie Oh yeah. Relieve the reef.
[laughter]
Arian [laughter]
Stay tuned for Lucieās parting nuggets of wisdom, coming up.
āŖ tune
Lucieās Lights
Arian The world of work is shifting on a mass scale. At the same time, young people are faced with very difficult prospects for work and education. What do you think the role of education, perseverance and networking are having on peopleās potential careers?
Lucie It has a very drastic effect. Nowadays every job position always requires a bachelorās, a masterās and tons of experience, which is not generally the case. But I think my advice would definitely be well, 2 things. The first one would be to gain experience as soon as possible. In anything, can be an organisation, just really anything that you know, they are interested about.
And more for people that are actually just not sure what they want to study. If they are between two things, like Oh, maybe I want to do psychology or I wanna be an engineer, I think even though itāsā¦ getting a job is just much more difficult nowadays, there are also many more opportunities to gain experience. And I think like one of the first advice would really just be to gain experience on the ground, in the field, because thatās what I did.
Before I graduated from, at school, I worked for this NGO in the Dominican Republic and thatās really when I was like Oh, yeah, I definitely wanna do marine conservation. This is exactly what Iām passionate about. Because itās really hard to go from this idea of oh, I wanna be a marine biologist to actually knowing what it entails, like what you will be doing every day like day to day.
So I think that would definitely be my first advice just to get experience. And that experience you can then put in your CV. And thatās always welcome. You know, for interviews and things. And the second is, I mean you mentioned it as part of your question, but the network.
I think network is so so important. If youāre inspired by someone, if itās just a company that you think you would love to work in, just try to contact the people that work in that organisation, or contact that person and they will really let you know like, how they could be an ideal candidate for a job position within the organisation, what kind of experience you would need; or just advise you whatever questions you might have; yeah, really network is really everything. Like the bigger your network, the more youāll be able to get to your destination.
Arian [laughter] thatās lovely.
Outro
Arian Well, thank you for joining me Lucie,
Lucie Thank you so much.
Arian And thank you for listening, and remember, If you donāt fancy being burnt and fed to a baby tree, you can always replace your blood with a cryopreservant and sit in a freezer for a couple hundred years until medicine figures out how to revive you. I wonder if youāll still be able to speak the language once you wake up. Byeeee
Lucie Byeeeee