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| Pacific sardines [NOAA] | 
Aloha Sardine Friday!
        No other edible fish is as prevalent as the sardine, and
        sardines are one of the most eaten foods in the world. The
        small, oily fish belongs to the Clupeidae family. The
        name sardine dates back to the fifteenth century,
        likely coming from the island of Sardinia in the Mediterranean
        Sea, an area around which sardines were once prevalent. Sardines
        are still abundant in the Mediterranean, as well as in the
        Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. 
Huge
            spike in costs to help salmon could derail WA transportation
            budget 
        Come January, lawmakers will face a surprise that will strain
        Washington’s transportation budget for years: an up to $4
        billion increase in the cost of complying with a court order to
        improve salmon passage under state highways. 
      
Federal
            agency recommends allowing Makah whale hunt
        The federal government has issued its final environmental impact
        statement. It recommends a ceremonial hunt of up to two or three
        gray whales per year. But the final decision can’t come for at
        least another 30 days. The Makah tribe originally made this
        request in 2005. Bellamy Paithorp reports. (KNKX) 
      
B.C.
            releases draft framework for safeguarding biodiversity and
            ecosystem health 
        Conservationists are welcoming a years-in-the-making strategic
        plan that would prioritize the health and biodiversity of
        ecosystems in B.C. in provincial legislation. 
      
First
            Nations decisions on tourism in B.C. must be respected:
            minister
        'We have to make sure that we are developing a new stream of
        tourism that's led by Indigenous communities,' says federal
        tourism minister. 
      
Study
            shows climate change vulnerability of trees used for urban
            forestry in Puget Sound
        A study
        by an Evergreen State College student shows the climate change
        vulnerability of several trees used for urban forestry in the
        Puget Sound region. 
        
Petitions filed for initiative to erase Washington’s ambitious climate law
Backers say they turned in nearly 420,000 signatures. The measure seeks 
to end the cap-and-invest program that’s brought in nearly $1.6 billion 
this year for pollution-fighting efforts. 
  
Surging numbers of pink salmon raise ecological concerns
An estimated 70% of all the salmon in the North Pacific are pink salmon.
 Scientists say the extreme abundance of pinks could be causing a 
"trophic cascade" that is harming species across the food web. 
      
      
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected in
        Salish Sea News and Weather which
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