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  • WSG candidate seminar: Dr. Troy Hartley
    Please join Washington Sea Grant and the UW College of the Environment for four public seminars presented by candidates for the position of Director of Washington Sea Grant. Each candidate will address the questions: “What does success look like for Washington Sea Grant over the next 5-10 years, a...
  • Elder Memories, Ancient DNA and the Fate of the Herring
    Elder Memories, Ancient DNA and the Fate of the Herring WSG researcher Lorenz Hauser leads a binational, multidisciplinary investigation into the decline of the North Pacific’s little big fish. Conservation is a never-ending battle against collective amnesia. As living...
  • WSG candidate seminar: Vice Admiral Michael Devany
    Please join Washington Sea Grant and the UW College of the Environment for four public seminars presented by candidates for the position of Director of Washington Sea Grant. Each candidate will address the questions: “What does success look like for Washington Sea Grant over the next 5-10 years, a...
  • CORRECTION: First European Green Crab Confirmed in Port Angeles
    February 5, 2018: CORRECTION Since this report was made, we have determined that the evidence originally submitted of the crab’s identity was not verifiable as a direct observation of the crab. Because European green crab is currently very rare in Washington’s Salish Sea, the majority of...
  • Looking Back on 50 Years: Jeff Adams, A Naturalist at Heart Who Brings Marine Science to the Community
    In honor of the 50th anniversary of Washington Sea Grant, we’re sharing reflections from current and former longtime staff about their work. By Grace Freeman, WSG Science Communications Fellow Photo: Vashon Nature Center In the 15 years that marine ecologist Jeff Adams has worked at Washington...
  • New Study Aims to Examine Diet of West Coast Pinnipeds
    March 11, 2020 By Bobbie Buzzell, WSG Science Communications Fellow  Sea lions at nearly high tide on an offshore rock. Photo courtesy of Dr. Sophie McCoy, Florida State Univ. Ocean food webs are complex and often difficult to study — but breaking down every connection is important to unders...
  • Padilla Bay: In It For The Long Haul
    August 23, 2021 August 30 of this year will mark the fifth anniversary of the first confirmed detection of invasive European green crab along the inland shorelines of Washington which occurred on San Juan Island. Three weeks later, the region will hit the same milestone for the second confirmed dete...
  • UW Aquatic Science Open House
    Are you inspired by watery worlds? Do you like discovery and exploration? Have you ever wondered what an aquatic scientist does all day? Come join us for a family-friendly afternoon of hands-on learning at our UW Aquatic Science Open House, a celebration of work and research that relates to wate...
  • Understanding Dormancy Requirements and Germination of Alexandrium Cysts and Evaluating Cyst Mapping as a Tool for Early Warning of Harmful Algal Blooms
    predicting Alexandrium blooms Understanding Dormancy Requirements and Germination of Alexandrium Cysts and Evaluating Cyst Mapping as a Tool for Early Warning of Harmful Algal Blooms Studies revealed that surface-sediment cyst mapping alone may not reveal the full risk of Alexandrium cate...
  • Looking Back on 50 Years: Robyn Ricks Turns Science Into Art
    In honor of the 50th anniversary of Washington Sea Grant, we’re sharing reflections from current and former longtime staff about their work. Robyn Ricks has shaped how the outside world sees Washington Sea Grant for over two decades. As the program’s creative director, Ricks designs communicatio...
  • Ocean Acidification SS Autumn17
    Ocean Acidification Are Pacific salmon heading for a nosedive?   If you’re not one for the smell of fish, be thankful that you’re not a Pacific salmon. Salmon have a sense of smell that’s said to be thousands of times stronger than a dog’s, and that sensitivity is essential. Sa...
  • Lessons for Washington from the Japan Earthquake and Tsunami of 2011
    January 15, 2020 It is hard to comprehend the scale of damage that resulted from the 2011 Japanese tsunami. Entire forests, neighborhoods and even towns were washed away. It caused the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl. Overall, almost 20,000 people were proclaimed dead or missing. More than ei...
  • Protocol in Focus: Why do we survey the habitat transect every month?
    One strength of the Crab Team protocol is that it enables us to confidently compare findings among sites, and track changes over time – even if different people are doing the sampling. With sampling on this scale, even the small steps can be important to what we learn from the data. Protocol in Fo...
  • Use of Ancient, Historic, and Modern Salmon DNA to Parse Effects of Human-induced Change
    ANCIENT, HISTORIC, MODERN SALMON DNA ANALYSIS Use of Ancient, Historic, and Modern Salmon DNA to Parse Effects of Human-induced Change Researchers from Washington State University work to document the chronology of change in salmon DNA in relation to human impacts. Principal ...
  • Director’s Note: The U.S. House Passed the Tribal Coastal Resiliency Act. Here’s Why That Matters
    December 19, 2019 Russell Callender, WSG Director On December 10, the U.S. House of Representatives voted to approve a package of bipartisan bills called the Tribal Coastal Resiliency Act. The legislation was introduced by Representative Derek Kilmer, and authorizes more mone...
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