With historically unprecedented ice loss in the Arctic, The Coast Guard suddenly has vast new areas where it needs to monitor ship traffic and perform search-and-rescue operations, and researchers from UW have been tagging along. OCEAN‘s Jamie Morison is quoted; read more about this partnership and what they’re finding.
Read more »UW student creates, shares sound art in the Washington Park Arboretum
Before equipment is installed, Aresty listens to make sure sound is coming from both of the pipes attached to a recorder. Her compositions play at seven sites in the arboretum. (Image: Steve Rigman/The Seattle Times) A UW doctoral student composes a musical installation now playing at the Washington Park Arboretum, “Paths II: The Music of Trees”, heeding the call by UWBG‘s Director Sarah Reichard for UW students to incorporate the Arboretum in their art.
Read more »Follow along with UW oceanographers via NYTimes
Oceanographers from the Applied Physics Lab are headed out to sea… hopefully. Follow along with Jim Thomson, principal oceanographer, as he blogs for the Scientist at Work section of the New York Times. They’ve already had some challenges, but maybe it’ll be smooth sailing from here….
Read more »Status of and solutions for the world's 'data-poor' fisheries - ScienceDaily
A new study published in Science suggests that the world’s unassessed fisheries — those with relatively little data describing their status — are declining rapidly, but that this trend could be reversed. SAFS‘ Ray Hilborn is a co-author; read more here!
Read more »Nisqually tribe manually separate wild & hatchery salmon as they come upriver
A plastic pipe fence the length of a football field stretches across the Nisqually River near Joint Base Lewis-McChord property, signalling a new era in fisheries management for the Nisqually Tribe. The portable dam, which includes traps and augers to lift the fish into holding tanks, is designed to capture every fall chinook salmon that has made it through a gauntlet of fisheries that stretches from Alaska to the river.
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