Biography
Aranza Gómez is a marine biologist with expertise in wildlife health, behavior, and conservation. Aranza earned her bachelor’s and professional degree in Marine Biology from Valparaiso University, Chile. She has extensive field research experience working in wildlife health projects in Chile, South Africa and North America. Aranza’s research has involved significant fieldwork in Guafo Island, Chilean Patagonia, where she participated in a long-term study on the foraging ecology, behavior, and health of South American fur seals. Over the course of more than four years, she worked closely with a diverse team of researchers and volunteers, contributing to the capture, sampling, and behavioral observation of marine mammals. Her work included developing protocols to monitor maternal behavior and interspecies aggression, as well as performing laboratory analyses on blood and fecal samples to assess health and parasitic infections in fur seals.
In addition to her field research, Aranza has gained valuable experience at the University of Guelph, Wild Immunology Laboratory, where she assisted in processing biological samples and performing immunological assays. She has contributed to research on marine mammal immunity and has collaborated on several studies examining the ecological and evolutionary impacts of parasitism in marine species.
Contact Information
+56934080994
Areas of Interest
- Marine mammal conservation
- Behavioral ecology
- Marine conservation
- Marine policy
Affiliations
No affiliations provided.
Selected Publications
- Wai Tsang W+, Wu K+, Fischbach J+, Zhang S+, Gomez-Camus A, Seguel M*. 2025. Mild to moderate lungworm (Metastronglyes spp.) infection is associated with marked Th2 inflammation in harbor porpoises (Phocoena phocoena). Developmental and Comparative Immunology. 170. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dci.2025.105437
- Zaitseva V, Arakawa N, Co C, Gomez-Camus A, Perez-Venegas D, Montalva F, Gutierrez J, Ulloa-Contreras C, Chihuailaf R, Verdugo C, Bienzle D, Seguel M*. Systemic inflammation impairs recovery from hookworm-associated anemia in a wild marine mammal host. Submitted for publication.
- Diego J. Perez-Venegas, Felipe Montalva, Josefina Gutierrez, Aranza Gómez-Camus, Antonia Angel, Claudia Ulloa-Contreras, Blanca E. Molina-Burgos, Gustavo Chiang, Chris Harrod, Héctor Pavés, Maritza Sepúlveda, and Mauricio Seguel. Maternal Care Strategies Differentially Optimize the Health and Immunity of Male and Female South American Fur Seal Pups Ecological and Evolutionary Physiology 2024 97:6, 327-341
Selected Projects
- 2023-2024 Identification of threats and risk areas for marine mammals in Chile. Marine Biology Thesis project.
- 2024 Sea lion vs fur seals: Understanding the roots of sea lion (Otaria byronia) predation of South American fur seals (Arctocephalus australis australis)". The Society for Marine Mammalogy Grants in Aid of Research 2024.
- 2025-2026 Impacts of Early-life Sociality on the Survival of South American Fur Seals
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