ANeMoNe Project Helps Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe Track Ocean Acidification
The Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe wants to know how ocean acidification might be affecting shellfish in Sequim Bay. Ocean acidification (OA),…
Protecting Natural Resources for Everyone
The Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe wants to know how ocean acidification might be affecting shellfish in Sequim Bay. Ocean acidification (OA),…
The Quinault Indian Nation (QIN) has closed all its fisheries in Grays Harbor and Queets River due to low returns…
During the First Stewards climate change symposium last year, Dr. Simone Alin made a well-received presentation describing the process of…
The inaugural First Stewards symposium, to be held July 17-20 in Washington, D.C. is a national event that examines the…
The Seattle Times has an article discussing the developing science and research into the effects of ocean acidification in Puget…
For the Quinault Indian Nation (QIN), it is a grim truth that to protect the marine resources that sustain them,…
A group of Suquamish Tribe teenagers recently tackled a complicated issue that natural resources managers are just starting to consider – ocean acidification.…
The coastal treaty Indian tribes and the state of Washington as co-managers continue to work with the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary (OCNMS) to achieve a shared vision of priorities for understanding and protecting the marine environment and improving the lives of all who depend on the sea.