

, associate director of the ‘s and director of the , donated $45,000 to the to create a new fund supporting Hawaiian monk seal research at the (SOEST). The fund was established in honor of Dunlap’s late husband, Danny Brooks (DB), and his tireless work researching and protecting Hawaiian monk seals on Oʻahu.
The DB and Marilyn Dunlap Hawaiian Monk Seal Research Fund will support monk seal research at the (JIMAR) at SOEST, particularly in its collaborative monk seal work with the (NOAA).
A valuable partner in monk seal conservation
DB Dunlap saw his first monk seal on Sandy Beach in 2001. Soon he was spending every day searching Oʻahu‘s coastlines or peering through binoculars at Rabbit Island from UH‘s , gathering voluminous details of Hawaiian monk seal behavior that now form a core of knowledge about local monk seal ethology.
DB was able to identify individual animals, all of whom were affectionately named, by both sight and the particular ways they moved. He also responded to monk seal sightings and beachings all over the island, to both observe and protect the seals.
From 2003–2017, he recorded almost 20,000 monk seal sightings on Oʻahu, sending daily reports and data to NOAA.
Honoring DB‘s life and dream
Marilyn Dunlap has been with UH ²Ñ¨¡²Ô´Ç²¹ for almost 50 years, starting as a graduate student in in 1968. Knowing the unique challenges of funding in the sciences, she wanted her gift to be broadly flexible to allow JIMAR to use the funds according to the specific needs and opportunities of monk seal efforts each year.
“I want to support efforts to protect and preserve the species, and to honor DB and support the university,” she said. “I’m hopeful the gift will allow JIMAR and NOAA to do the work not supported by federal funding, and to continue to educate people about the seals and their value to the environment.”
For the , see the UH Foundation website.
—By Marcie Grabowski
