草榴社区

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Research recap: Students working on new research in anthropology and environmental sciences
Meet Mitchell Gibbs, 草榴社区's visiting Fulbright scholar from Australia
草榴社区鈥檚 Robin Kodner Secures $1.9M NSF Grant to Support DEI Initiatives in Scientific Societies
A new approach to science rooted in Indigenous tradition

MEGHNA CHAKRABARTI: If you walk along the beach on the Pacific Northwest coast, you might not notice some very special things. They're called clam gardens, and they've been sitting along the shore for thousands of years.

MARCO HATCH: Clam gardens are these really special intertidal鈥

Tribe reviving traditional shellfish resources, management practices

鈥淭here are places that once held millions and millions of oysters and now they are completely gone,鈥 said Marco Hatch, an environmental sciences professor at Western Washington University and a partner in the Indigenous Aquaculture Collaborative Network that helped organize the鈥

2023 Outstanding Graduates: College of the Environment
'Watermelon snow' piques curiosities in Utah after abnormally wet winter

The changes in the magnitude and timing of the melting 鈥 the exposure of bare ground earlier in the season 鈥 can cause problems in the Mountain West, affecting ecosystems and species that rely on cool water downstream and reservoirs designed to accommodate more gradual snowmelt. In places like鈥

草榴社区 grad student (now alumna) Jackelyn Garcia named the 2023 Washington Sea Grant Keystone fellow
One Quick Question: The Pebble Mine, salmon, and the future of Bristol Bay
Why is some of our snow turning pink?

Why is snow turning pink?

"There's a group of algae that have adapted to live in the snow habitat," said Robin Kodner, the lead scientist for the at Western Washington University. "But they only start to鈥

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