Aloha Mutt Friday!
National Mutt Day celebrates mixed breed dogs, and the goal of
the day is to embrace, save, and celebrate mixed breed dogs by
creating awareness about the great numbers of them in animal
shelters that are in need of a home. The hoped for result of
the day is that people visit animal shelters and adopt a mixed
breed dog, or possibly donate their time and money to
shelters.
Big
picture view of the Salish Sea emerges in richly detailed
map
Jeff Clark thought the existing maps of the Salish Sea didn’t
have enough detail. So he set out to make a much more detailed
map, “to increase the geographic literacy of the area.” The
result is The Essential Geography of The Salish Sea, a
wall-sized map that gives viewers a “big picture view” of the
Salish Sea bioregion.
Here’s
why the West Coast Dungeness crab season has been delayed
Oregon’s most valuable commercial fishery, Dungeness crab,
will have its season delayed from its traditional Dec. 1 start
date because of low meat yields.
Chinook
threshold decreased for endangered orcas
The Pacific Fishery Management Council has decreased the
number of chinook salmon it allocates each year to feed
Southern Resident orca whales. The number is important because
added conservation measures to ensure adequate food for the
Southern Residents can only be put in place if that number is
not reached.
Invasive
crab population keeps booming in Washington
Trappers have caught nearly a quarter million European green
crabs in Washington waters so far in 2022. This year’s
record-smashing tally of the invasive species—248,000 caught
as of Oct. 31—is more than twice the total caught last year
along Washington shorelines.
What
drives Puget Sound's 'underwater Amazon'?
What drives Puget Sound's 'underwater Amazon'? The interaction
between fresh and salt water stokes an engine that drives
water circulation throughout the entire basin, something
intensely important to the understanding and management of
Puget Sound.
Is
B.C.’s $6 billion commitment to Coastal GasLink and LNG
Canada still economically viable?
B.C. estimates it will earn $23 billion over 40 years once LNG
Canada gets going, but net-zero pledges raise questions about
whether global demand for gas will hold up over the project’s
lifespan.
Port
of Vancouver's 'ambitious' zero-emissions plan praised,
but critics say LNG stands in the way
Canada's largest port has committed to becoming a zero-carbon
port by 2050, a transition still in its infancy but has been
dubbed ambitious by clean shipping advocates, as calls to
dramatically reduce the industry's carbon footprint by that
time grow louder and more urgent.
Vanishing
lichens a sign rare B.C. rainforest is approaching
ecological collapse
Lichens are a canary in the coal mine for the inland temperate
rainforest and their demise is sounding the alarm about
widespread biodiversity loss.
Washington tribe tests its rights to commercial net pen fish farming
An executive order from the Washington State Department of Natural
Resources earlier this month aims to end commercial net pen fish farming
in Washington’s public waters. Cooke Aquaculture is in a joint venture
with the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe to farm two species of native fish in
net pens in Port Angeles Harbor and the tribe wants to proceed with its
fish farming.
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
news clips, send your name and email to mikesato772 at
gmail.com. Your email information is never shared and you can
unsubscribe at any time.
Salish Sea News: Communicate, Educate, Advocate
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