Stepping up collaborative efforts with a Sea Grant “exchange program”

Louisiana Sea Grant and New Hampshire Sea Grant staff members trade places and gain insight

by  Rebecca Zeiber, New Hampshire Sea Grant
Sea Grant extension staff are tapping into a valuable resource — their out-of-state colleagues — to help generate new ideas for their own program’s efforts and improve collaboration within the nationwide Sea Grant network.
Sea Granters from New Hampshire and Louisiana have recently kick-started efforts for what they call a “Sea Grant Exchange Program,” where, like an exchange student, staff spend time working with their counterparts in other areas of the country for a small period of time.
Twyla Herrington, Louisiana Sea Grant (LASG) area fisheries agent and Alan Matherne, LASG marine agent, met Gabriela Bradt, New Hampshire Sea Grant/UNH Cooperative Extension marine fisheries specialist, at the 2013 Sea Grant Academy. Their bond forged over swapping fisheries outreach stories from their home states, and that got them thinking: Why not continue the beneficial idea exchange that starts at the Academy and keep the momentum moving forward?
Their first exchange in March 2014 allowed Bradt to travel to Louisiana to participate in the Louisiana Fisheries Summit where she presented information on direct marketing of seafood in New England.
The experience allowed Bradt to start thinking of new ways of approaching challenges and opportunities back home.
“I came back to New Hampshire with a head full of ideas for potential additions and changes to my fisheries outreach efforts,” Bradt said.
The experience also helped Bradt to establish new contacts for potential future collaborations, she added. She accompanied Harrington and other LASG fisheries extension staff throughout the rest of their weekly activities, where Bradt said she learned about Herrington’s work with fisheries and ecotourism in areas impacted by hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Bradt said it was an eye-opening experience to learn about the various ways extension agents are accessed by their stakeholders.  
“I did not know that as Sea Grant agents, we could be called upon to find out information on bait types and prices, or to speak to insurance providers,” she said. “It’s clear that many different people depend on Twyla and use her for the great resource she is.”
Herrington said she learned a lot as the host, too. “As a field agent, I assumed everyone has diverse duties but Gabby’s job is much more focused than mine,” she explained.  “Understanding the expertise that resides within this network is invaluable for future projects and even dealing with current ones.”
“Thanks to this exchange, I am now comfortable picking up the telephone and calling these fellow Sea Grant agents if I have questions or to refer them to other people, because I now have an idea of what they can offer both in knowledge and experience,” Bradt explained. 
Although there is not currently a formalized process for these exchanges, Bradt and Herrington hope other Sea Grant programs are able to take advantage of their peers’ knowledge and efforts by participating in exchanges similar to this effort.
For photos of Bradt’s tour around Louisiana’s fisheries exchange week, please visit the N.H. Sustainable Marine Fisheries blog.
Related Posts
An American lobster photographed off the coast of Gloucester, Massachusetts by Keith Ellenbogen | MIT Sea Grant Visiting Artist.
American Lobster

Sea Grant’s American Lobster Initiative awards $5.4 million to further innovative research and outreach in support of the lobster industry and fishing communities

Since 2019, Sea Grant’s American Lobster Initiative has addressed critical knowledge gaps about the American lobster and its fishery facing a dynamic and changing environment. The Initiative supports a regional extension program in the Northeast and a national research competition. Fifteen emerging research projects were selected in 2023 and 2024 for $4.6 million in federal funding by the NOAA National Sea Grant College Program. Coordinated by Maine Sea Grant since 2019, the Northeast lobster extension program was recently renewed with an $840,000 federal award that supports work through 2026.

Read More >
Gallery of 2025 Knauss finalists
Academia to Government

Sea Grant welcomes 2025 Knauss Marine Policy Fellowship finalists

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Sea Grant College Program is thrilled to announce the finalists for the 2025 class of the Knauss Marine Policy Fellowship. This year, for the first time in program history, all eligible Sea Grant programs are represented by a diverse cohort of 88 early-career professionals who will spend the next year working alongside federal agencies or legislative offices in Washington, D.C., applying their academic expertise to critical marine, coastal and Great Lakes policy issues.

Read More >
Scroll to Top