STORIES FROM THE PEOPLE PROTECTING AND RECOVERING PUGET SOUND

WASHINGTON INVASIVE SPECIES COUNCIL

Washington Invasive Species Council website About invasive species How Invasive Species Threaten Salmon Aquatic invasive species of greatest concern European Green Crab information Report an invasive species sighting

WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

Puget Sound Local Climate Change Needs Analysis Report Building Green Cities Critical areas adaptive management training workshops Hazard Mitigation Integration Plan Resource Handbook Puget Sound Mapping Project

WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY

Reducing nutrients in Puget Sound Ecology and Climate Change Environmental Justice at Ecology Ecology’s Blog

WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE

In-season management for “mixed-stock” and “terminal area” salmon fisheries Collaboration with ‘North America’s longest-running Pacific salmon derby’ expands research, understanding of central Puget Sound resident Chinook salmon WDFW launches 10-year strategy for managing recreation on WDFW-managed lands

WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Washington Shellfish Safety Map Shellfish Program Environmental Justice Climate and Health

WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES

MyCoast App Helps Smart Phone Users Keep Puget Sound Clean Introducing the Washington 100 — wa100.dnr.wa.gov

WASHINGTON STATE RECREATION AND CONSERVATION OFFICE

Southern Resident Orca Recovery

WASHINGTON STORMWATER CENTER

Tree research – using trees to manage stormwater
Measuring Individual Tree Water-use in Mature Native Species in the Pacific Northwest to Determine their Benefits for Stormwater Management Measuring Individual Tree Water-use in Mature Native Species in the Pacific Northwest to Determine their Benefits for Stormwater
Salmon ecotoxicity
Urban Roadway Runoff Is Lethal to Juvenile Coho, Steelhead, and Chinook Salmonids, But Not Congeneric Sockeye (Citation: French, B. L., D. H. Baldwin, J. Cameron, J. Prat, K. King, J. W. Davis, J. K. McIntyre & N. L. Scholz (2022). Urban roadway runoff is lethal to juvenile coho, steelhead, and Chinook salmonids, but not congeneric sockeye. Environmental Science & Technology Letters. In Press. DOI: 10.1021/acs.estlett.2c00467)