Title | Authored on | Link to edit Content | |
---|---|---|---|
Study: New boating distance rule no cure-all for Southern Residents | New legislation, passed by the state Legislature earlier this month, requires boats and vessels in Puget Sound to maintain a between them and endangered鈥 |
||
Protect Salish Sea with shared strategy between B.C. and WA | The Salish Sea is truly a wonder. On a daily basis, we see orcas, salmon, eagles and many other species travel up and down its coasts, taking advantage of the remaining healthy habitats for feeding and refuge. None of them take notice of the international boundary running through the middle of鈥 |
||
Shared waters of the Salish Sea need a shared response between B.C. and Washington | The Salish Sea is truly a wonder. On a daily basis, we see orcas, salmon, eagles and many other species travel up and down its coasts, taking advantage of the remaining healthy habitats for feeding and refuge. None of them take notice of the international boundary running through the middle of鈥 |
||
Salish Sea Institute receives $300,000 gift to continue its transboundary environmental work | |||
'Unrelenting pressure': The Salish Sea is in trouble as western Washington keeps growing | It is the water that has sustained the people of western Washington forever, but researchers now say the Salish Sea is under 鈥渦nrelenting pressure鈥 put on it by 150 years of human development. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an incredible place. People come from all over the world to see the Salish Sea,鈥 said鈥 |
||
草榴社区鈥檚 Salish Sea Institute Releases Comprehensive 鈥楽tate of the Salish Sea鈥 Report | |||
The Curious Case of the Salish Sea Feet | Nonetheless, traditional ecological knowledge is making its way into more academic settings, starting with the Salish Sea Institute at Western Washington University. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 make sense for us to do any work without considering the鈥 |
||
30th Anniversary Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference To Convene In Seattle | More than 1,300 scientists, policy makers and other interested parties are attending next week鈥檚 鈥 |
||
It鈥檚 time to save our orcas, state lawmaker says | 鈥淭here are concerns that the population may be so low that it can鈥檛 recover,鈥 said Ginny Broadhurst, director of the Salish Sea Institute at Western Washington University. |
||
Western Hires Ginny Broadhurst as the New Director for its Salish Sea Studies Institute |