research

SeaDoc Announces More than $200,000 in New Funded Research

SeaDoc Announces More than $200,000 in New Funded Research

We're excited to announce that SeaDoc Society will fund five new scientific research projects aimed at improving the longterm health of the Salish Sea. Each project was carefully reviewed and selected by our Scientific Advisory Committee and funded through your donations from people like you.

We look forward to sharing more about each of these as fieldwork ramps up, but here is a brief look at the newly funded projects:

Welcome New Science Advisors & Farewell to Those Who Served!

Welcome New Science Advisors & Farewell to Those Who Served!

We’re excited to introduce you to two newest members of the SeaDoc Society’s Scientific Advisory Board—a crucial part of our work here in the Salish Sea. Before we properly introduce Sunny Jardine and Nicholas Georgiadis, let’s say farewell to three outgoing Science Advisors that have lent SeaDoc their expertise for a combined 50 years! Huge thanks from our whole team!

Do Hatchery Salmon Influence the Migration of Wild Salmon? 

Do Hatchery Salmon Influence the Migration of Wild Salmon? 

Many salmon populations in the Salish Sea are bolstered by releases of juvenile fish that are raised in hatcheries. Juvenile salmon are particularly social creatures, which means many wild salmon may school with (and be influenced by) these hatchery-released fish.

Researchers have long suspected that the seaward migration of hatchery fish might inspire wild salmon to migrate out to sea along with them at times when they might not have otherwise made the trek.

Field Photos: On the Water with the Pinto Abalone Team

Field Photos: On the Water with the Pinto Abalone Team

Like we covered in a post this summer, saving endangered Pinto abalone is hard in part because locating their habitat is time consuming and, as a result, expensive. It requires boats and dive crews in search of suitable locations, but a recent SeaDoc-funded project is looking for something more efficient.

Photojournalist Gemina Garland-Lewis has been following Dr. James Dimond of Western Washington University and his team this summer as they’ve explored a new method: bottling up water and testing it for the presence of abalone DNA to determine habitat. That would simplify things greatly!

Field Photos: The Art of Working With Surf Smelt Embryos

Field Photos: The Art of Working With Surf Smelt Embryos

We recently funded a project that will study smelt habitat, which is being encroached upon by development. The project uses underwater cages to measure pollution exposure, which you can read about in our June blog post.

Photojournalist Gemina Garland-Lewis is shadowing the team in the field. Here are photos from a recent excursion.

Is a Newly Discovered Worm a Threat to Oysters in the Salish Sea?

Is a Newly Discovered Worm a Threat to Oysters in the Salish Sea?

Is a newly discovered shell-boring worm a threat to Olympia oysters—a species of concern and the only oyster species in the Salish Sea?

Dr. Chelsea Wood and her team at the University of Washington School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences aims to answer that question. If so, this will be crucial information to modify the current restoration plan for Olympia Oysters (Ostrea lurida).

Photos from the Field: A Surf Smelt Study in Motion

Photos from the Field: A Surf Smelt Study in Motion

Surf smelt are small fish that play a big role in the food chain, serving as a key food source for sport fish, including the salmon that feed the endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales. They spawn near the shore in areas most vulnerable to land-based pollution.

We recently funded a project that will study smelt habitat, which is being encroached upon by development. The results could help us better understand and protect shorelines.

Exciting New Faces at SeaDoc Society!

Exciting New Faces at SeaDoc Society!

We’re excited to announce two exciting additions and (one transition) to the greater SeaDoc team!

Laura Donald is our newest member of the the Board of Directors and Marco Hatch and Marguerite Pappaioanou have joined our Science Advisory Committee. We couldn’t be more thrilled to have all three of them in these roles! Their insight and drive will be immensely valuable as we carve our way through 2019 and beyond with science as our foundation and new outreach and education opportunities on the horizon.