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  • 1895
    “The difference between the titles of the Bush Act and the Callow Act is that the State can only retake the land under the Bush Act title when as an established fact the land has ceased to be used for oyster culture, whereas under the Callow Act the state can take them back at any time.” Senat...
  • Seabird Bycatch – Gillnets
    Gillnets A gillnet is a wall of netting that hangs in the water column, commonly used to catch salmon. Diving seabirds such as the marbled murrelet, a threatened species native to the Pacific Northwest, can become entangled in gillnets and drown. In the face...
  • Director’s Note: Welcoming Our New Assistant Directors
    July 29, 2020   About a year ago, we began on a path toward strengthening the organizational framework of Washington Sea Grant (WSG). Notably, this included a plan to expand our leadership team with two new assistant director positions that would fill central roles in su...
  • Salmon Habitat Restoration in Thermally Impaired Waters: Engineered Log Jams, Hyporheic Exchange and Cool-Water Refuge
    Log Jams Provide Refuge  Salmon Habitat Restoration in Thermally Impaired Waters: Engineered Log Jams, Hyporheic Exchange and Cool-Water Refuge Engineered log jams are being tested for their ability to promote shallow groundwater upwelling, which can help create cool-water refuges critica...
  • Documenting the European Green Crab Range Expansion
    (Header photo: Allen Pleus, Aquatic Invasive Species Unit Lead for Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife with one of the green crab captured in Padilla Bay during the collaborative assessment trapping effort in 2016.) February 6, 2018 The very first publication by Crab Team was just released ...
  • Researchers Document Salmon Diversity Using Ancient DNA
    Researchers Document Salmon Diversity Using Ancient DNA WSU scientists invent novel techniques to tackle a challenging question of genetic history By Max Showalter, WSG Science Communications Fellow Northwestern rivers like the Columbia and Snake were once brimming with salmo...
  • Building Citizen Science with Volunteers as Partners: Part 3
    The field of citizen science has grown explosively over the last decade, benefitting from excellent PR, Presidential shout-outs, advances in big data, and, not least, a Web 2.0 world replete with hashtags, networks, and crowdsourcing. It turns out people love doing science in their spare time! The h...
  • Kelp in the Kitchen: Cochayuyo Chocolates
    February 18, 2020 By Bobbie Buzzell, WSG Science Communications Fellow  Ready to try something really off the beaten path with kelp? If you’ve been following our kelp recipe blogs, you may have noticed an Asian theme with previous posts. But there are indeed other cultures that have incorp...
  • 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 ...
  • Coastal Green Crab Captures Increased in 2021
    January 20, 2022 Trapping throughout 2021 indicates that the European green crab invasion has grown across Washington’s coastal estuaries, namely Willapa Bay, Grays Harbor, and Makah Bay. This year’s collaborative efforts by many partners to remove crabs and track the invasion also confirmed tha...
  • Celebrate the Olympic Coast with a Beach Clean-up, Barbecue and Movie Night
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 14, 2019 CONTACTS: Ian Miller, 360-417-6460 or immiller@uw.edu MaryAnn Wagner, 206-616-6353 or maryannb@uw.edu   Celebrate the Olympic Coast with a Beach Clean-up, Barbecue and Movie Night  On April 20, the Washington Coast Clean-up and 6th Annual River & Ocean ...
  • CERF Webinar: Blending complementary ways of knowing—Traditional Ecological Knowledge and Science—to support coastal hazards resilience and restoration decision-making
    Presented by: Matthew Bethel, Ph.D., and DeWitt H. Braud About this webinar: Traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) is a living body of knowledge that includes environmental observations and experiences that occur in places and within an indigenous cultural context. In coastal Louisiana, a multidis...
  • Virtual workshop: Marine carbon dioxide removal and marine energy in the Pacific Northwest (Day 3)
    Given expanding scientific and technological interest in using the ocean for marine carbon dioxide removal (mCDR) and marine energy (ME; also called marine renewable energy or marine hydrokinetic energy), it will be essential to design responsible, community-forward research that is attentive to soc...
  • Coast Guard-Approved First Aid at Sea Workshop
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE October 30, 2018 CONTACT:   Sarah Fisken, Washington Sea Grant 206-543-1225 sfisken@u.washington.edu Coast Guard-Approved First Aid at Sea Workshop  Effectively treat hypothermia, near drowning and other incidents while on the water. Monday, December 10 in Seattle, Washingto...
  • Marine Debris Can Ruin A Day on the Water
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 2, 2020  CONTACTS: Aaron Barnett, Boating Operations Specialist (206) 853-6991 or at aaronb5@u.washington.edu or MaryAnn Wagner, WSG Communications maryannb@uw.edu Marine Debris Can Ruin A Day on the Water Boaters are the front line in keeping Washington’s waters safe ...
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