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  • Harmful Algal Blooms
    Harmful Algal Blooms Several species of single-celled algae growing in Washington produce potent toxins that can poison marine animals or become concentrated in shellfish and sicken, even kill, humans who eat them. Even when they don’t harm humans, toxic blooms can force costly shutdowns ...
  • Sablefish: The New “It” Fish
    Sablefish: The New “It” Fish Whether you call it sablefish, black cod or butterfish, this species is making a name for itself as a desirable menu item. Native to the West Coast, sablefish is highly valued in the U.S. for its buttery flavor, and has potential for new markets abroad in Ko...
  • Crab Team at the Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference
    May 31, 2022 The second all-virtual Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference (April 26-28) offered everyone with an interest or involvement in the inland waters shared by Washington and British Columbia the chance to connect over a huge range of topics, impacts of last summer’s heat dome, southern resi...
  • Three Washington Graduate Students Selected for the 2019 NMFS-Sea Grant Fellowship
    August 21, 2019 Washington Sea Grant is excited to share that three of the eight graduate students selected for the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS)–Sea Grant Fellowship this year are from the University of Washington. Through the fellowship, doctoral students are provided with two- and t...
  • Building Capacity to Protect the Salish Sea From European Green Crab
     July 5th, 2018 As we wrote last week, the first half of this monitoring season has seen several new detections of European green crab, but as green crab appear to be ramping up, so is the group of humans ready to control them. WSG Crab Team is now a project with five team members (including two fu...
  • Detection of European Green Crab in Drayton Harbor
    August 22, 2019 Crab Team volunteers in Drayton Harbor, just south of the border with Canada, found the shell of an invasive European green crab while walking the beach this past Saturday. The detection is the furthest northward along Washington shorelines the invasive species has been confirmed. Ma...
  • Marine Affairs Work is More Than Counting Fish
    How the WSG Diversity, Equity and Inclusion workgroup strives to change marine fields From the spring 2020 Sea Star print newsletter By Sallie Lau, Guest Student Writer The DEI Workgroup is comprised of more than half of WSG staff, including those pictured here. Clockwise: Melissa Watkinson...
  • Environmental DNA (Part 1): Green Crab Monitoring 2.0?
    February 24, 2022 Early detection is one of the best ways to thwart an invasive species, but trying to find some of the first individuals to arrive in a new habitat is no easy task. WSG Crab Team built a monitoring network to meet this challenge: by using multiple search methods and finely tuning th...
  • Funding
    Funding Washington Sea Grant provides competitive and noncompetitive funding opportunities for researchers who seek to address questions about our oceans, coastlines, and coastal communities. Projects frequently involve collaboration among scientists from both public and private agencies....
  • Who Brings Your Seafood to You? An Interview with Andy Mitby
    October 5, 2020 By James Lee, Science Communications Fellow Andy Mitby of Drake Teal Fisheries is a fourth-generation fisherman and also a Husky alum, with a bachelor’s degree in marine science from the University of Washington. He says his house is now divided, now that his kids attend UW ...
  • Crab Team’s Rapid Response: Day 2 & 3, the Big Finale!
    September 14, 2016 Emily here again, this time from back in Seattle. Our boots are washed, the gear is stowed, and we are all ready for some well-earned rest. But first, a quick update to fill you in on the rest of our rapid response sampling effort on San Juan Island (read about Day 1). Number of ...
  • Who Brings Your Seafood to You? An Interview with Amy Grondin
      October 12, 2020 By James Lee, Science Communications Fellow Amy Grondin is a salmon fisherman and a sustainable seafood consultant. She owns Duna Fisheries, LLC with her business partner and husband Greg Friedrichs. When they’re not fishing on F/V Arminta, their 48-foot wooden fishing b...
  • 2016 Washington Sea Grant-Funded Projects
    December, 2016 Shoreline armoring removal: synthesis and assessment of restoration effectiveness in Puget Sound Jeffrey Cordell, Jason Toft and Emily Howe, UW School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences; Megan Dethier, UW Friday Harbor Laboratories Local officials, state resource managers and conscientio...
  • Small Spills, Big Problems, Sound Solutions
    July 25, 2016 To paraphrase an old saying, “There’s no use crying over spilled oil.” Yet many are concerned with oil pollution in Puget Sound and in the San Juan Islands. What people don’t realize is that the biggest source of spills so far in the region has not been tankers and freighters, ...
  • 22nd Conference for Shellfish Growers
    First convened by Washington Sea Grant in 1991, the Conference for Shellfish Growers brings together representatives from the shellfish industry, government and academia. This year, the conference will focus on emerging issues and shellfish culture. For more information, see the conference webpage....
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