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  • Nicole Faghin, WSG Coastal Management Specialist, Retires
    July 26, 2022 Best of luck in your next adventures, Nicole! Nicole Faghin, who served as a Washington Sea Grant coastal management specialist since 2012, has retired. During her time at WSG, Nicole was an invaluable resource to planners, decision-makers and community members as she fostered partner...
  • Tôm Rim (Vietnamese Caramelized Shrimp)
    September 23, 2022 By Olivia Horwedel, WSG Science Communications Fellow This week we are making tôm rim, a delicious Vietnamese caramelized shrimp recipe from the food blog, Wok and Kin. This recipe encourages using the freshest shrimp available, so Washington Sea Grant suggests using spot prawns ...
  • Green Crab Trappers Get Skunked at Pysht
    July 17, 2019 Lora Burke and Gillian Elofson, interns with the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe loaded up with traps and ready to put their new waders to good use, and Chelsey Buffington (center), WDFW technician, prepare to head out on the mud. Photo: Emily Grason. Drenched and muddy, but greatly relieved...
  • Crab Team Training Workshop (San Juan Island)
    This event is free, but registration is required.  Interested in becoming a Crab Team volunteer monitor to help protect pocket estuaries in north Puget Sound? This full-day training workshop will fully equip you to be our “Boots in the Mud” and join the Crab Team volunteer corps &#...
  • New Video: Swinomish Community Visits a Clam Garden
    April 28, 2021 “Our coast Salish people had methods of cultivating the natural environment to support the ecosystems but also to feed the people,” says Alana Quintasket, senator for the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community. “And a clam garden is one example of that.” However, cl...
  • Crab Team Training Workshop (FULL)
    This event has filled to capacity. We invite you to our remaining 2017 trainings in Blyn (3/31) or Port Townsend (3/20).  Interested in becoming a Crab Team volunteer monitor to help protect pocket estuaries in north Puget Sound? This full-day training workshop will fully equip you to be our &...
  • Protocol in Focus: Why do we measure European green crabs?
    We are Crab Team after all, so it’s perhaps no surprise that we are not shy about getting up to our elbows in details about the crabs we catch. But what can we actually learn from looking at size data of crabs? What makes handling all the angry pinchers worthwhile?  We’re covering this rich top...
  • Environmental DNA (Part 2): A Cautionary Carp Tale
    March 3, 2022 This is the second in a series of posts sharing new research on the use of environmental DNA (eDNA) in detection of green crabs. For our introduction to eDNA, check out the previous post. Collaborator Ryan Kelly shows just how easy sample collection is for eDNA assays at a site on Vash...
  • 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...
  • Effects of Ocean Acidification on Salmon Olfactory Function and Magnetoreception
    OCEAN ACIDIFICATION AND SALMON Effects of Ocean Acidification on Salmon Olfactory Function and Magnetoreception Examined whether ocean acidification impairs salmons’ ability to smell. Principal Investigator Evan Gallagher, University of Washington, Department of Environment...
  • 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...
  • Elder Memories, Ancient DNA and the Fate of the Herring
    C onservation is a never-ending battle against collective amnesia. As living resources are consumed or extinguished, baselines shift. Past abundance is forgotten, and new generations adjust to a diminished new normal. A case in point is the forage fishes that are foundations of the marine ...
  • Protocol in Focus: What is “live epifauna”?
    September 8, 2016 One strength of the Crab Team protocol is that it enables us to confidently compare findings among different 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 l...
  • Shoreline restoration: community science to monitor effectiveness
    July 10, 2023 Read on UW School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences News. Jason Toft surveying for beach wrack. Photo courtesy of Jason Toft. Jason Toft from the UW Wetland Ecosystem Team has been monitoring shoreline armor restoration in Puget Sound for over a decade at sites where artificial armor ...
  • Impacts from the Summer 2021 Heatwave on Washington Shellfish
    July 21, 2021 Dead butter clams. Photo: Ron Carr The record-breaking heat that hit the Pacific Northwest from June 23 to 28, 2021, caused harm to many intertidal shellfish and invertebrate species on Washington beaches. On many beaches, species such as cockles, varnish clams, butter clams, and nativ...
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