The collaborative process plays a critical role in habitat restoration. With support from a federal grant, the Skagit Fisheries Enhancement Group has been working with the Samish Nation to restore areas along the Samish River after the removal of the noxious weed knotweed. This effort has involved a collaborative strategy between the Samish and Skagit Fisheries to engage landowners and the community to achieve restoration and noxious weed control. In addition, Skagit Fisheries has a broader approach to community engagement and working with landowners to achieve restoration for salmon habitat. Case examples will be presented to showcase these efforts
Stewardship Partners recognizes the crucial role farmers play in the protection of our watersheds an...
Coastal geologic processes create and maintain the nearshore habitats upon which forage fish and man...
A picture of a floodplain can invoke different meanings for the people of Puget Sound: home, working...
The importance of both the restoration and preservation of riparian habitats was already something I...
In 2015 the Department of Ecology led development of a new initiative to protect and restore riparia...
Half of Puget Sound’s wild Chinook salmon come from the Skagit River. Although the number dropped dr...
Community engagement builds both social and ecological resilience of restoration projects. This is p...
The Stillaguamish and Snohomish River watersheds are regionally important to the health of Puget Sou...
The Skokomish River ecosystem, including critical salmon habitat, in the Skokomish Valley has been d...
The Fisher Slough Freshwater Tidal Marsh Restoration project, located in the Skagit River Delta, was...
For several decades, the North Olympic Salmon Coalition (NOSC) has been working with agricultural pr...
A coalition led by the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (HCSEG), Jefferson County (County), and T...
The Nooksack Salmon Enhancement Association (NSEA) Students for Salmon (SFS) Program is an establish...
When Chinook salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, were listed as threatened, in 1998, under the Endange...
Cowling Creek is the largest watershed on the Port Madison Indian Reservation. The Reservation is lo...
Stewardship Partners recognizes the crucial role farmers play in the protection of our watersheds an...
Coastal geologic processes create and maintain the nearshore habitats upon which forage fish and man...
A picture of a floodplain can invoke different meanings for the people of Puget Sound: home, working...
The importance of both the restoration and preservation of riparian habitats was already something I...
In 2015 the Department of Ecology led development of a new initiative to protect and restore riparia...
Half of Puget Sound’s wild Chinook salmon come from the Skagit River. Although the number dropped dr...
Community engagement builds both social and ecological resilience of restoration projects. This is p...
The Stillaguamish and Snohomish River watersheds are regionally important to the health of Puget Sou...
The Skokomish River ecosystem, including critical salmon habitat, in the Skokomish Valley has been d...
The Fisher Slough Freshwater Tidal Marsh Restoration project, located in the Skagit River Delta, was...
For several decades, the North Olympic Salmon Coalition (NOSC) has been working with agricultural pr...
A coalition led by the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (HCSEG), Jefferson County (County), and T...
The Nooksack Salmon Enhancement Association (NSEA) Students for Salmon (SFS) Program is an establish...
When Chinook salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, were listed as threatened, in 1998, under the Endange...
Cowling Creek is the largest watershed on the Port Madison Indian Reservation. The Reservation is lo...
Stewardship Partners recognizes the crucial role farmers play in the protection of our watersheds an...
Coastal geologic processes create and maintain the nearshore habitats upon which forage fish and man...
A picture of a floodplain can invoke different meanings for the people of Puget Sound: home, working...