Marine Monitoring: Eyes Over Puget Sound Feb. 6
Join Stream Team for a rare opportunity to meet the Department of Ecology scientists involved in Eyes Over Puget Sound; see the equipment and learn how it’s used;Read more...
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Join Stream Team for a rare opportunity to meet the Department of Ecology scientists involved in Eyes Over Puget Sound; see the equipment and learn how it’s used;
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) is seeking nominations through Feb. 15 for membership on an advisory group being formed in response to the legal harvest of a giant Pacific octopus in Seattle last October. Up to 12 qualified individuals will be chosen to serve on the ad hoc group and develop recommendations for protecting giant Pacific octopus in Puget Sound. The group will meet periodically through the end of August.
Science-based strategies help managers to adapt to general warming trend. Longer, warmer growing seasons associated with a changing climate are altering growing conditions in temperate rain forests, but not all plant species will be negatively affected, according to research conducted by the U.S. Forest Service’s Pacific Northwest Research Station.Page 10 of 34
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