Aloha UFO Friday!
World UFO Day is dedicated to the existence of unidentified flying objects. First celebrated in 2001, it was created by the World UFO Day Organization. The day is often celebrated on June 24 and July 2, although The World UFO Day Organization declared July 2 to be the official day. June 24 marks the anniversary of one of the first UFO sightings in the United States, when Kenneth Arnold reported seeing nine high-speed crescent-shaped objects near Mt. Rainier in Washington, in 1947. July 2 marks the anniversary of the Roswell UFO incident, which also happened in 1947.
Placing
            microphones on orcas offers a point-of-whale perspective on
            underwater noise 
          Research on the sounds and feeding behavior of Puget Sound's
          southern resident orcas is providing new insight into how the
          whales respond to underwater noise. 
Fighting
            Floods, or Living With Water? 
          Every year, Lower Mainland residents prepare for the Big One.
          But there’s another type of disaster that we’re reminded about
          less often: a major flood. We have two choices. Last in a
          series.
Navy
            SEAL use of state parks appears over as state declines to
            appeal judge’s decision  
          The Washington Attorney General’s office has declined to
          appeal a judge’s ruling that bans Navy SEAL or other military
          training in Washington state parks. 
B.C.
            launches strategy to protect communities from climate change
          
          The provincial government says the strategy is backed up with
          more than $500 million in spending during the next three
          years. 
New
            study: 2021 heat wave created ‘perfect storm’ for shellfish
            die-off 
          A team led by the University of Washington has compiled and
          analyzed hundreds of these field observations to produce the
          first comprehensive report of the impacts of the 2021 heat
          wave on shellfish. Michelle Ma reports. (UW News)
        
60K
            green crabs captured in Washington waters so far in 2022 ...
            that's a lot 
          State wildlife officials say more than 60,000 European green
          crabs have been captured in Washington state waters so far in
          2022. That is far more than what they captured and killed by
          this time last year.
....[T]his year, on May 11, 167 years after Territorial Governor Isaac Stevens signed the Treaty of Point Elliott with western Washington tribes, a group of Duwamish sued the U.S. Department of the Interior, Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, and the federal government as a whole.
Returning
            home: The Elwha's genetic legacy 
          Following dam removal, migratory salmon have been free to swim
          into the upper Elwha River for the first time in 100 years.
          Their actual behaviors and reproductive success may well be
          driven by changes in their genetic makeup.
Jury
            awards $595,000 to Lummi tribe for salmon pen collapse 
          A Washington state jury on Wednesday awarded the Lummi Indian
          tribe $595,000 over the 2017 collapse of a net pen where
          Atlantic salmon were being raised 
The
            federal government just extended B.C. salmon farm licences.
            Here’s what you need to know  Fisheries and Oceans
          Canada Minister Joyce Murray announced a two-year extension
          for dozens of salmon farm licences that were set to expire at
          the end of June. 
        
Budget
            watchdog says Trans Mountain expansion is no longer
            profitable 
          Canada's budget watchdog says building the federally owned
          Trans Mountain pipeline expansion is no longer a profitable
          investment after costs ballooned to more than $21 billion. 
        
Wild steelhead still a force in the Elwha 
Migration patterns have apparently reawakened for the Elwha River's wild
 steelhead. Studies show that the fish may have retained much of their 
genetic drive despite 100 years of being trapped behind dams. 
        
        
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected
          in Salish Sea
            News and Weather which is compiled as a community
          service by Mike Sato. To subscribe at no cost to the weekday
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