Search Results for "����������������������������������TALK:PC90���������������������:www.za32.net"


  • WSG in the News 2020
    Washington Sea Grant in the News December 2020 What causes king tides and where to see otters in the wild in Washington The Seattle Times, December 10 Witness King Tides and help build a picture of the future The Wahkiakum County Eagle, December 10 Head outdoors this holiday season to witness k...
  • 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...
  • Gardening Green sustainable landscaping class
    Gardening Green provides practical information and simple yet powerful actions to protect the environment and human health. This is a relaxed, fun class that incorporates presentations, demonstrations, hands-on experiences, a native plant walk, and tours of sustainable landscapes. By the end of c...
  • Crew School
    “Crew School” is designed to provide fundamental commercial fishing crew member training; in the classroom, aboard commercial fishing vessels and in the historic Ancich Netshed on Gig Harbor’s waterfront. Two Washington Sea Grant U.S. Coast Guard approved safety-training courses are in...
  • Better Bleeding and Savvier Selling
    Washington Sea Grant Teaches the Practical Skills Needed to Preserve Sustainable Fisheries, Tribal Employment, and Coastal Communities By Eric Scigliano The Pacific Northwest’s salmon fishermen faced a crisis. Starting in the early 2000s, cheap Chilean farmed salmon flooded the country, driving d...
  • Carbon comes home
    Carbon Comes Home How a serendipitous connection led ocean acidification researchers to an island farm Back in the early 2000s, Washington State was ground zero for ocean acidification,” Meg Chadsey, ocean acidification specialist at Washington Sea Grant (WSG), says. “Fossil fuel emissi...
  • Making Adventure Accessible
    Sea Wolf Adventures takes passengers with disabilities to the Pacific Northwest’s most beautiful places From the spring 2020 Sea Star print newsletter Kimber Owen, owner of Sea Wolf Adventures, has an exceptional memory for the people that she’s taken on her 12-passenger cruise ship, whi...
  • Video Right
    Video Layout Shortcode Vivamus sagittis lacus vel augue laoreet rutrum faucibus dolor auctor. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vivamus sagittis lacus vel augue laoreet rutrum faucibus dolor auctor. Donec ullamcorper nulla non metus auctor fringilla. Buy this theme s...
  • Coaches/Teams
    Prospective Orca Bowl Coaches and Teams   How to Form a Team Orca Bowl teams traditionally consist of teams of four to five high school students (four competitors and one alternate) and an adult coach. Please review NOSB’s eligibility rules below to ensure that your team qualifies to...
  • Impacts of Armoring on Puget Sound Beaches: Diverse Effects on Diverse Scales
    Armoring impacts on puget sound beaches Impacts of Armoring on Puget Sound Beaches: Diverse Effects on Diverse Scales Researchers provided long-needed data and protocols for evaluating beach armoring impacts and shoreline restoration benefits, leveraging state funds to expand this research....
  • Sound Citizen: Students and Citizens Working Together to Evaluate Sources and Fates of Emerging Pollutants in Puget Sound
    Sound Citizen monitoring of emerging pollutants Sound Citizen: Students and Citizens Working Together to Evaluate Sources and Fates of Emerging Pollutants in Puget Sound SoundCitizen directly engaged more than 2,000 people each year in documenting common yet undetected Puget Sound contamina...
  • NOAA Open House
    Explore your world and learn more about how NOAA – the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration – works to understand and predict changes in Earth’s environment to help protect people and property and to conserve and manage coastal and marine resources. Join us at the We...
  • Who Brings Your Seafood to You? An Interview with Steve Seymour of Drayton Harbor Oyster Company
    September 27, 2022 Looking ahead to National Seafood Month in October, we are sharing this profile of a local seafood entrepreneur By Olivia Horwedel, WSG Science Communications Fellow  Steve Seymour (right) with his son, Mark Seymour (left), serving up some fresh oysters. Photo credit: Drayton Har...
  • After nearly 40 years of sharing life-saving skills, Sarah Fisken retires
    As a WSG marine operations specialist, Fisken grew the organization’s marine workshop program and forged trust and community across the state in the process From the Winter 2023/2024 Sea Star By Samantha Larson, WSG Science Writer The first time Sarah Fisken put on a survival suit, she was immedia...
  • 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 ...
Page 5 of 11 «...34567...»