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- WSG News
WSG News From drifters to drivers: How moon jellyfish are reshaping marine ecosystems A WSG-funded project unravels how moon jellyfish aggregations are causing ecosystem-wide impacts in Puget Sound July 14, 2025 Seattle, WA – Moon jellyfish blooms are a stunning sight to se... - 2018 Volume 2
2018 Volume 2 Summertime Crabbing September 7, 2018 WSG Crab Team first piloted its monitoring protocols in August 2015, when 30 volunteers monitored 7 sites. This year, the program has grown to have 200 volunteers and 25 staff from partner agencies and area... - Reimagining Our Future Shorelines
From the winter 2020–2021 Sea Star print newsletter The Washington Coastal Resilience Project will continue to help communities prepare for shoreline hazards for years to come By MaryAnn Wagner, WSG Assistant Director for Communications Owen Beach, located in Point Defiance Park, is a popular a... - In the Nick of time? An early detection and rapid assessment in Hood Canal
June 8, 2022 The amazing volunteers who make up Washington Sea Grant’s Crab Team have done it again, detecting a basketful of green crabs before they became a truckload. Part of what makes this event particularly significant is that it’s in Hood Canal, a basin of the Salish Sea where green crabs... - The Washington Sea Grant Hershman Fellowship has a track record of launching recent graduates into marine policy careers
Many Hershman alums find themselves coming back full circle as they mentor the next generation of fellows From the Winter 2023/2024 Sea Star By Samantha Larson, WSG Science Writer Since 2008, Washington Sea Grant (WSG) has placed recent graduate students in offices across the state to spend a year w... - Protocol In Focus: Why do we use mackerel as bait?
September 10, 2018 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 d... - New guide from the Washington Coastal Resilience Project helps coastal planners use the latest sea level rise data
July 9, 2020 IN BRIEF: The Washington Coastal Resilience Project team – a collaboration between the state’s Department of Ecology, the University of Washington Climate Impacts Group and Washington Sea Grant – are releasing How to Choose, a guide to support the use of available sea level ris... - Sally Brownfield: People of the Water
November 27, 2019 Washington Sea Grant is a proud sponsor of We Are Puget Sound: Discovering & Recovering the Salish Sea, a new book by David L. Workman, Leonard Forsman, Mindy Roberts and Brian J. Cantwell from Braided River (an imprint of Mountaineers Books). The following profile is an excerp... - 2024 Green Crab Status Summary: Part 2 (Coastal Estuaries)
February 13, 2025 In this post, we’ll continue our reflections back on 2024 through the lens of the status and trends of European green crabs in Washington. In the last post, we shared observations from trapping efforts across Salish Sea shorelines. Here we shift to shorelines on Washington’s Pa... - 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... - 2023 Green Crab Status Summary: Part 1 (Inland)
April 10, 2024 While 2023 already seems like an eon ago, last year’s trapping season is still very much on our minds even as we launch the 2024 monitoring effort. The winter is a time for green crab managers to regroup, review data to interpret green crab population patterns and think about strate... - What can you do about OA?
Ocean acidification action page What can you do about OA? More than you think! While it’s true that the only long-term solution to OA is a global reduction in CO2 emissions, there are things we can do to mitigate OA locally. Our region is experiencing some of the most severe acidification in the w... - Aquaculture Timeline
Washington Coast Shellfish Aquaculture Timeline Welcome to the Washington Coast Shellfish Aquaculture Timeline. This project is part of the Washington Coast Shellfish Aquaculture Study project, which is an effort to improve the long-term sustainability of shellfish aquaculture in Willa... - 1900
“An Effort Also to be Made to Introduce Japanese Oysters on the Pacific Coast, as They Are More Congenial to the Cold Waters.Special Dispatch to the Post-Intelligencer WASHINGTON, June 26. Representative Jones has been for some time working on Fish Commissioner Bowers regarding the introduct...