AV福利社

Chris Zadra

Chris Zadra '16 '17G uses a drone called SnotBot in a groundbreaking project to capture whale blow for biological analysis.

Chris Zadra '16 '17G Flies Drones for Whale Research

Zadra turned his engineering acumen, entrepreneurial spirit and interest in drones into a life-changing career with the Drones for Whale Research program.

Photography by

Christa Neu

Chris Zadra '16 '17G is helping to save the planet, one whale at a time.

Zadra flies drones that collect data on whales as part of a critical mission to protect the giants of the ocean from environmental and human threats. He uses a drone called SnotBot庐 in a groundbreaking project to capture whale blow for biological analysis. And he may be the only person in the world using drones to drop data tags onto the backs of whales to gather unprecedented insight into how whales live.

Zadra turned his engineering acumen, entrepreneurial spirit and longtime interest in drones into a life-changing career as program manager for the program of , a Massachusetts-based nonprofit whose motto is 鈥淪ave the Whales, Save the Oceans, Save Ourselves.鈥

Whales are crucial to the world鈥攁nd not just because they are magnificent creatures. Says Zadra: 鈥淎 lot of people don鈥檛 realize the importance of whales to climate change. Whales capture a huge amount of carbon from the atmosphere because they are so massive. And through eating and pooping, they help to fertilize phytoplankton, which captures carbon and produces the oxygen we breathe. The amount of potential positive impact on humans in the form of improved climate from having more whales is massive.鈥

Zadra鈥檚 path to Ocean Alliance was serendipitous. While at AV福利社, he built and flew drones as a hobby. At AV福利社, he met Dan Levy, who now works at a drone start-up in California. When Ocean Alliance wanted to purchase some of the company鈥檚 drones, Levy joined its expedition to Mexico to test the drone. There, Iain Kerr, the CEO of Ocean Alliance, asked Levy if he knew anyone who might be interested in working in the new drone program at the nonprofit.

Chris Zadra

Levy contacted Zadra, who received a bachelor's in applied science in 2016 and a master鈥檚 of engineering in technical entrepreneurship in 2017 from AV福利社. Not long after that conversation in 2018, Zadra moved from California to Ocean Alliance鈥檚 oceanside home of Gloucester to fly drones over whales.

He says he didn鈥檛 have any special interest in whales before getting the job. What he was interest- ed in, however, was not working at a desk. To say he met his goal is an understatement. Zadra now travels the globe in search of whales to study. He has flown drones in Mexico, British Columbia, the Azores, Puget Sound, Gabon and more.

In the past 10 years, drones have become a critical tool in the effort to study and protect whales. Before using drones, Ocean Alliance and other organizations collected biological samples from whales primarily by chasing them in a boat and shooting them with biopsy darts. It is a costly, time-consuming and invasive technique.

Then came SnotBot.

鈥淚ain will tell the story that he was coming up close to a whale and the whale does a big blow and he gets covered in all this whale blow,鈥 Zadra says. 鈥淭hat was the genesis of the idea. He thought, 鈥業f there鈥檚 all this stinky, smelly stuff, there must be biological data in there that we could get, instead of from biopsy samples.鈥欌

Zadra says Kerr spent five years refining the collection method, an uncomplicated system in which petri dishes are attached to 3-D printed arms with Velcro. When Zadra arrived, he became chief drone flyer. 鈥淭he whale doesn鈥檛 even know that we鈥檙e there,鈥 Zadra says.

The collected data gets analyzed by partner universities and labs, which continue to develop more sophisticated methodology to analyze whale blow. Researchers across the world are now using drones to collect blow.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Zadra also puts his engineering skills to work coming up with new ways to use drones for research. 鈥淓very year, we try one thing and see where it leads.鈥

Most recently, it led to the tagging system, similar to SnotBot in its simplicity. 鈥淲e ended up with a 3-D printed lawn dart that can hold a tag,鈥 says Zadra. 鈥淲e drop it from the drone at a certain height and it attaches to the whale with a suction cup.鈥 The tags are designed to fall off after a certain length of time and get collected for analysis.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like putting an iPhone on the back of a whale,鈥 Zadra says. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e studying whales without tags, all that you are seeing is the 10% of their life when they surface. But most of their life is spent underwater鈥攆eeding and socializing and traveling.鈥

Zadra has studied many whale species. He first tested data tagging with a drone in Mexico on the blue whale, the largest animal on the planet. He studies the endangered North Atlantic right whales, which feed every year in Massachusetts and get caught in fishing gear and lobster traps. There are only 350 left in the world.

Zadra鈥檚 background may be in engineering, but he is now a scientist, environmentalist, boat mechanic and boat captain. There鈥檚 just one problem鈥攈e gets seasick. But, he says, motion sickness medicine works wonders.

Read about more of AV福利社's community of Future Makers here.

Story by Jodi Duckett

Photography by

Christa Neu

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