Filter Projects: Select Research ThemesAll Research ThemesEcosystem HealthCoastal Hazards & Climate ResilienceCoastal Hazards & Climate Resilience > Sea Level Rise & ErosionSeafood, Fisheries & AquacultureSeafood, Fisheries & Aquaculture > Restorative AquacultureSeafood, Fisheries & Aquaculture > Shellfish AquacultureSeafood, Fisheries & Aquaculture > Safe, Sustainable SeafoodWater QualityWater Quality > Harmful Algal Bloom MonitoringMarine Economy & Workforce DevelopmentMarine Economy & Workforce Development > Marine Economies Select YearsAll Years202420222018 Search projects Apply Active Projects 9 projects matching your filters All projects 2024 | Completed | Ecosystem Health Integrating community science data with long-term aerial surveys to understand seasonal and long-term shifts in marine bird use of Puget Sound 2022 | Completed | Ecosystem Health, Seafood, Fisheries & Aquaculture Distinct population segments in Puget Sound rockfishes (Sebastes spp): improving management of a vulnerable species complex 2024 | Active | Ecosystem Health Coastal ecosystem resilience: how eelgrass donor population structure influences restoration success 2024 | Active | Ecosystem Health Like a fish out of water: Seasonal variation in spawning habitats and spatio-temporal genetic adaptation of a climate-vulnerable species 2024 | Active | Ecosystem Health, Restorative Aquaculture Physical processes in clam gardens 2022 | Completed | Ecosystem Health Unblocking bottlenecks in recovery of endangered pinto abalone populations 2022 | Completed | Ecosystem Health, Seafood, Fisheries & Aquaculture Two-eyed seeing in practice: Participatory modeling to evaluate pinniped hunting in Puget Sound as a tool for salmon recovery 2022 | Completed | Ecosystem Health, Restorative Aquaculture Sustaining Marine Forests: A genomics and experimental approach to inform bull kelp restoration, aquaculture and conservation 2024 | Active | Ecosystem Health Floodplains and food webs: evaluating the benefits of tidal delta restoration for Chinook salmon and their prey