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Review panels on Pebble mine set for October – Cordova Times
Review panels on Pebble mine set for October
Cordova Times
… Fisheries Science Center’s Auke Bay Laboratory; Daniel Schindler and Charles (Si) Simenstad of the University of Washington’s School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences; and Mike Stone, former chief of fisheries for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department.
and more »
via “school of aquatic and fishery sciences” – Google News
Read moreOcean acidification threatens US fisheries – Washington Post
Ocean acidification threatens US fisheries
Washington Post
Dr. Carolyn Friedman / University of Washington School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences. Scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Environmental Protection Agency and the University of Washington research changes in …
via “school of aquatic and fishery sciences” – Google News
Read moreCoEnv Science in Motion – featuring Lauren Kuehne
In case you missed it, the College recently highlighted the research of the Olden Lab in their Science in Motion Series. Read the complete story here.
Read moreKPLU – Inside that mysterious goo, oysters have a story
Inside that mysterious goo, oysters have a story »
By Keith Seinfeld
The oyster is more than a seafood favorite. It’s an ecological lynchpin in Puget Sound and on beaches around the world, so scientists are thankful the Pacific oyster is the latest creature to have its genetic code unveiled.
The shellfish has a lot going on inside.
“I’m just always totally amazed that what most people think of as a shell full of goo, when they open it up, has this very complex physiology, where they control reproductive process very similar to humans and mammals,” says Steven Roberts, a professor of fisheries at the University of Washington.