Maureen Vo, BSc
NoiseTracker Coordinator (Outreach and education)
Maureen has worn many hats since joining Raincoast in 2016. She initially joined as the Education Coordinator to pilot the Salish Sea Emerging Stewards Program and simultaneously continued to build capacity and develop programs for Raincoast through her role as Development Coordinator. Currently, she is now the NoiseTracker Coordinator and working to pilot a BC coast-wide collaborative initiative amongst underwater acoustic data gatherers to create an integrated and comprehensive map-based noise visualization system on a centralized platform that will help inform policy and management decisions to reduce underwater noise impacts on marine life.
Her multidisciplinary work and experiences have allowed her to truly understand and value the power of collaboration and weaving different knowledge systems together, which she applies to all her work.
Maureen completed an interdisciplinary master’s degree in marine biology and computer engineering from the University of Montreal. She is mostly found outdoors wandering through coastal forests and exploring the ocean and its inhabitants through boating, sailing, and now freediving.

Recent articles
Connectivity where the land meets the sea
Paquet, P.C., C.T. Darimont, F. M. Moola, and C. Genovali.…
Range expansion by moose into coastal temperate rainforests of British Columbia, Canada
Darimont, C.T., P.C. Paquet, T.E. Reimchen, and V. Crichton. 2005.…
Predators in natural fragments: foraging ecology of wolves in British Columbia’s central and North Coast archipelago
Darimont, C.T., M.H.H. Price, N.N. Winchester, J. Gordon-Walker, and P.C.…
Crossroads: Economics, Policy and the Future of Grizzly Bears in British Columbia (2004)
Crossroads assembles a wide range of information from a variety…
Journal of the Wolf Project – May 2003
This spring has sprung the 4th full season for the…
Foraging behaviour by gray wolves on salmon streams in coastal British Columbia
Darimont, C.T., T.E. Reimchen and P.C. Paquet. 2003. Foraging behaviour…

