Habitats are places where plants and animals live, feed, and reproduce. The Casco Bay watershed includes many productive habitat types, including upland forests, riparian areas, salt marshes, seagrass beds, tidal mudflats, and rocky outcrops. Those habitats are home to a diversity of species -- from lobsters and clams to alewife and moose
This document provides a summary of shorebird-use during the second field season of the Casco Bay Sh...
CBEP looked at the ten of the fourteen municipalities that line Casco Bay to identify potential area...
Project description: The Casco Bay Estuary Partnership (CBEP) was awarded a grant from the Gulf of M...
These are a few of the projects implemented by some of the partners of the Casco Bay Estuary Project...
Through collaboration with its partners, the Casco Bay Estuary Partnership (CBEP) is devoted to prot...
Maine\u27s natural resources have always been important to its people. Timber, tourism, agriculture ...
Casco Bay is the largest oil port in Maine and northern New England, handling over 20 million tons o...
This is a fact sheet of the Southern New England-New York Bight Coastal Ecosystems Program, which id...
This document provides a summary of shorebird-use during the fourth field season of the Casco Bay Sh...
This document provides a summary of shorebird-use during the third field season of the Casco Bay Sho...
The 985 square miles of land and water that drain into Casco Bay form its watershed. Water in this a...
In 1990, Casco Bay was designated an estuary of national significance and included in the U.S. Env...
All animals need safe places to grow, reproduce, and find food. Marine animals are no different. In ...
Rhode Island’s coastal environment plays an integral role in providing habitat for hundreds of speci...
This document provides a summary of shorebird-use during the second field season of the Casco Bay Sh...
CBEP looked at the ten of the fourteen municipalities that line Casco Bay to identify potential area...
Project description: The Casco Bay Estuary Partnership (CBEP) was awarded a grant from the Gulf of M...
These are a few of the projects implemented by some of the partners of the Casco Bay Estuary Project...
Through collaboration with its partners, the Casco Bay Estuary Partnership (CBEP) is devoted to prot...
Maine\u27s natural resources have always been important to its people. Timber, tourism, agriculture ...
Casco Bay is the largest oil port in Maine and northern New England, handling over 20 million tons o...
This is a fact sheet of the Southern New England-New York Bight Coastal Ecosystems Program, which id...
This document provides a summary of shorebird-use during the fourth field season of the Casco Bay Sh...
This document provides a summary of shorebird-use during the third field season of the Casco Bay Sho...
The 985 square miles of land and water that drain into Casco Bay form its watershed. Water in this a...
In 1990, Casco Bay was designated an estuary of national significance and included in the U.S. Env...
All animals need safe places to grow, reproduce, and find food. Marine animals are no different. In ...
Rhode Island’s coastal environment plays an integral role in providing habitat for hundreds of speci...
This document provides a summary of shorebird-use during the second field season of the Casco Bay Sh...
CBEP looked at the ten of the fourteen municipalities that line Casco Bay to identify potential area...
Project description: The Casco Bay Estuary Partnership (CBEP) was awarded a grant from the Gulf of M...