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  • Could a Tsunami Hit Puget Sound?
    New tsunami hazard maps show how a Cascadia megaquake could impact Puget Sound June 22, 2021By Kathleen McKeegan, WSG Science Communications Fellow  It’s not a matter of if, but when. New tsunami hazard maps published by the Washington Geological Survey and the Washington State Department of ...
  • Robyn Test
    Head I am text block. Click edit button to change this text. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo. Sustainability of Tidal Energy (STE) is a National Science Foundation (NSF...
  • Environmental DNA (Part 4): The Vashon Island Mystery
    September 26, 2022 This is the fourth and final in a series of posts on a Crab Team project to develop environmental DNA (eDNA) for use in early detection and management of European green crab. Links to the previous posts are found in the text below. Environmental DNA (eDNA) has recently gained atte...
  • UW Graduate Student Selected for the 2022 NMFS-Sea Grant Fellowship
    August 23, 2022 We are pleased to announce that Kristin Privitera-Johnson (she/her), a doctoral student at the University of Washington School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences (UW SAFS), is one of eight fellows selected for the 2022 National Marine Fisheries Service-Sea Grant Joint Fellowship Program...
  • Are moon jellies eating up all the zooplankton?
    From the Summer 2023 Sea Star As dense aggregations of moon jellyfish form in Puget Sound, researchers study the ecosystem-wide impacts By Andrea Richter-Sanchez, WSG Science Communications Fellow Photo: Shutterstock Have you ever seen a jellyfish floating in Puget Sound? Chances are, it was a moon ...
  • Selling your catch: Sea Grant programs release new edition of direct marketing guide
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE February 22, 2018 CONTACT: Paula Dobbyn, Alaska Sea Grant, 907-274-9698, paula.dobbyn@alaska.edu MaryAnn Wagner, Washington Sea Grant, 206-616-6353, maryannb@uw.edu Selling your catch: Sea Grant programs release new edition of direct marketing guide The Sea Grant programs in...
  • Who brings your seafood to you? An interview with Thomas Foster-Kibbler and Heather Auld of Foster Fisheries
    January 24, 2024 By Alison Lorenz, WSG Science Writer Thomas Foster-Kibbler. Photo courtesy of Heather Auld. Before Thomas Foster-Kibbler got into commercial fishing, he wanted to be an EMT on a firefighting crew. He was living in sunny Los Angeles County, training to help others. The problem? He wa...
  • Washington Sea Grant Receives Funding from The Builders Initiative to Support Restorative Aquaculture
    January 26, 2022 Washington Sea Grant will use the $400,000 grant to further two key projects: the Cross-Pacific Indigenous Aquaculture Collaborative and the Washington Seaweed Collaborative From tribal fishermen exercising their treaty fishing rights to oyster farmers in south Puget Sound, seafood ...
  • Learn the Skills to Land a Job Fishing Salmon in Alaska
    January 25, 2022 The new Purse Seine Vessel Crew Member Training Program will hold its first session in April 2022 — register online at www.gigharborboatshop.org Photo: Guy Hoppen The Gig Harbor BoatShop and Washington Sea Grant are launching the Purse Seine Vessel Crew Member Training Program, or...
  • Evidence of Invasive European Green Crab Found at Two New Sites
    July 9, 2018 Washington Sea Grant’s Crab Team and Washington State’s Department of Natural Resources report evidence of the invasive European green crab at two new sites in the Salish Sea: Fidalgo Bay and Dungeness Landing, near Dungeness Spit. A green crab shell was found at Fidalgo B...
  • Molt Search
    Molt Search The emerging invasion by European green crabs (Carcinus maenas) threatens marine resources in Washington. Early detection of small populations gives us the best chance to reduce the spread and impact of this globally damaging invasive species. Wa...
  • Olympic OA Regional Vulnerability Assessment
    The Olympic Coast as a Sentinel – Tribal Communities at the Forefront of Ocean Change Indigenous people have depended on Olympic Coast marine species for their livelihoods, food security and cultural practices for thousands of years. Today, these species—and the triba...
  • Small Spills Aren’t Slick
    Small Spills Aren’t Slick Along with summer boating season comes an increased risk of smaller oil spills from recreational boats, which account for 75 percent of the oil dumped into local waters. The Washington Sea Grant Small Spills Prevention Program provides boaters with the knowledg...
  • Fall 2017
    Fall 2017 Wrapping up a busy year November 21st, 2017 The 2017 Crab Team sampling season has officially concluded, and We – with a capital “W”, inclusive of the whole community of Crab Team volunteers, partners, cheerleaders and staff – can b...
  • Non-Invasive Physiological Monitoring of Southern Resident Killer Whales
    Noninvasive assessment of Orca decline Non-Invasive Physiological Monitoring of Southern Resident Killer Whales Using scat-detection dogs and long-term physiological, reproductive, and toxicant monitoring, researchers worked to unravel the mystery of the Salish Sea orcas’ persistent decli...
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