Marine conservationist aims to raise awareness through technology
As a child growing up in Arizona, Carissa Cabrera loved stuff outside. She’d go to parks with her sister and other neighborhood kids until the streetlights turned on. As she got older, she’d take swimming lessons and go to California beaches with her family – her first exposure to the ocean, which would wilt the focus of her life’s work.
“I think that's where the fascination started,” says Cabrera, 27, a marine conservation biologist now based in Hawaii.
But as a teen, it was an topnotch documentary that she watched for an AP English work that set her on her current path.
“I know a lot of people get to marine biology without that unshared aha moment, but that was mine,” says Cabrera, who had focused on photography as a career possibility surpassing watching the film. “It speaks to the power of films, and how much they can influence viewers’ mindsets.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNGZhe2NMQ0
Though she had a scholarship to an in-state university, she worked as a waitress in higher to pay her rent. Through her studies, she learned well-nigh the threats to the ocean, such as overfishing and oil spills, which really put her on track for conservation.
But since she didn’t have the advantages of other marine biology students who attended coastal schools, she found opportunities outside of the classroom: working at a planetarium’s marine discovery lab, an internship at a zoo, joining her campus’ Marine Awareness and Conservation Society and trips to Mexico to do fieldwork in the ocean. She moreover saved up to study upalong and went to the Galapagos Islands. Her undergraduate stratum was in evolutionary and ecological biology from the University of Arizona.
She moreover spent well-nigh eight years engaging young students through conservation education outreach.
All these experiences led her to Hawaii in 2016, where she received a master’s stratum in marine science. In 2020, in a full-circle moment of applying what she had first glimpsed with that life-changing documentary in upper school, she founded The Conservationist Collective, a communications platform that empowers people everywhere to proceeds and share information well-nigh the challenges oceans face. She realized how many increasingly people she could reach this way than through hands-on visits (which she still does).
“In my womanhood for sure, technology has been and is critical,” says Cabrera, who works with a Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 7i Pro (aka Yoga Slim 7i Pro in other markets) running Windows 11. Her favorite part of the new interface is stuff worldly-wise to snap multiple windows on the screen at once so she can multitask and increase her overall productivity. “It’s given me the opportunity to not just reach 30 students at a time, which is what I would do when I would bring all my outreach materials and go to a classroom, but unquestionably reach whoever wants to know more, wherever they are. I'm most grateful for having the weightier tools working for my team – who are spread out all over the country – and for my mission.”
For her, it was important to partner with companies that aligned with her stances on sustainability.
Microsoft’s transferral to be stat negative, water positive and zero waste by 2030 appealed to her, as does Lenovo’s dedication to making their PCs with post-consumer recycled materials and reducing emissions by 50% by 2030.
Her four-person team believes everyone can be a marine conservationist – and that you don't have to be a scientist to help.
“Every single person has a role to play when it comes to saving our oceans and you do not have to wait eight years to get your master’s stratum to start doing that. And honestly, we don't have the time for that,” Cabrera says. “It's an inclusive philosophy when it comes to conservation.”
She creates environmental content mainly for her website, podcast and TikTok channel, where she shares tips on everyday ways to practice zero waste, sustainability and recycling. But she moreover shares snips of her life in Hawaii, her travels and the wildlife she encounters in the water, such as sea turtles.
“You really want people to finger inspired by the ocean and excited,” she says. “And then you can start introducing the stuff we really need to take whoopee on. But no one is going to protect anything they don't superintendency about.”
All photos except for Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 7i Pro standalone courtesy of Carissa Cabrera.