Marine Protected Areas Staff Biographies
Joseph A. Uravitch
Joseph Uravitch has worked for more than 20
years in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s
(NOAA) coastal, estuarine, Great Lakes, and ocean management
programs. During his career with NOAA, he has served as associate
director of the Office of Ocean and Coastal Management with
responsibility for strategic planning and international affairs,
and as the program manager for the Coastal Zone Management,
National Estuarine Research Reserve, and National Marine Sanctuary
Programs. In November 2000, he was tasked with developing
the National Marine Protected Areas (MPA) Center, authorized
by Presidential Executive Order 13158. Mr. Uravitch serves
as the MPA Center’s Director, overseeing its mandate
to design the framework for a national system of MPAs, provide
scientific and technical support for improving the stewardship
of MPAs, and consult with federal, state, and tribal agencies
and other stakeholders about a national system of MPAs.
Mr. Uravitch served as a technical member
of National Committee of the U.S. Man and the Biosphere Program’s
Coastal and Marine Ecosystems Directorate. He also was NOAA’s
representative on the Man and the Biosphere National Committee
from 1988 to1996. In addition, Mr. Uravitch was a member of
the first U.S. coastal delegation to the Peoples’ Republic
of China in 1985.
He helped draft various publications including
Protocol on Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife for the
Wider Caribbean Region and the International Maritime Organization’s
Guidelines for Particularly Sensitive Sea Areas.
Mr. Uravitch received his bachelor of arts
degree with department honors in political science from Case
Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. He earned a
master’s degree in urban and regional planning from
The George Washington University in Washington, D.C. Mr. Uravitch
is a charter member of the American Institute of Certified
Planners, the professional institute of the American Planning
Association.
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Charlie Wahle, Ph.D.
Dr. Charlie Wahle is a marine ecologist with extensive experience
working at the interface between science and policy of marine
conservation and protected areas. Prior to joining
the MPA Center, he served as NOAA's
liaison to three key interagency marine conservation initiatives:
the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force, the Invasive Species Council,
and the national MPA initiative. From 1993 to 1999, he led
the national programs for science, education, and conservation
policy for the National Marine Sanctuaries Program and the
National Estuarine Research Reserves Systems at NOAA headquarters
in Silver Spring, Maryland. Prior to joining NOAA, Dr. Wahle
developed and managed a marine research and teaching laboratory
on the New Jersey coast for Lehigh University. He has conducted
extensive field research on Caribbean coral reefs and mid-Atlantic
coastal ecosystems. An elected Fellow of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), Dr. Wahle earned his
doctorate in ecology and evolution from the Johns Hopkins
University in Baltimore, Maryland, and a bachelor’s
degree in aquatic biology from the University of California
at Santa Barbara.
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