Welcome to Salish Sea Restoration: Difference between revisions

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'''The [[Salish Sea]], including Puget Sound as its southern extent, is a rich maritime ecosystem of global signficanceThe stewardship of this ecosytem is in the hands of the people that live in it.   
[[File:Salish Sea.jpg|right|325px|The Salish Sea, by S. Frelan]]
'''''Click Icons to Browse...'''''
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<big>'''This website helps us work together to rebuild ecosystems.  We share resources, information and ideas under a shared [[social contract]].  A wiki is a collection of cross-linked web pages and documents.  Any user can create and edit pages and upload or download documents at any timeOur goal is to help each other find and synthesize informationRead more about [[The Big Picture]]...</big>
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This site helps agencies, citizens and scientists share information about restoration of ecosystems--a shared journal that uses the traditions of the scientific method as its [[social contract]]. We connect people to other people working in similar places or on similar issues, and promote coordination and transparency in our research and management efforts.
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[[File:Wikimission.png|50px|left|link=about the wiki]]
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<big>'''[[About the wiki|Why a wiki?]]</big>
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[[File:Introduction.png|50px|left|link=introduction]]
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<big>'''[[Introduction|How does it work?]]</big>
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[[File:CreateUserAccountButton.PNG|200px|link=https://salishsearestoration.org/index.php?title=Special:UserLogin&type=signup]]
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<big><big>'''Explore [[human system]] pages:'''</big></big>


We invite you to join us.
We work in [[human systems]] made of [[workgroups]] which use [[resources]] to complete [[efforts]] either building knowledge of [[topics]] or doing work in [[places]].  All this effort results in lots of [[documents]].  [[Master Topics]] are a good place to start exploring the structure of Salish Sea human systems.


==Our Ecosystems Framework==
<big><big>'''Explore [[ecosystem]] pages:'''</big></big>
[[file:LandscapeDiagram.jpg|500px|right|ECOSYSTEM SCHEMATIC--Systems are overlapping and interrelated, creating a network of ecosystems that span the Salish Sea basin]]
We divide the landscape into seven kinds of systems, each relatively consistent in ther physical dynamics, and how we use them.  The salish sea is a mosaic of these [[:category:site|sites]]:
<div style="font-size: 1.5em">
[[file:Headwater_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:headwater]] '''[[:category:headwater|Headwaters]]'''


[[file:Lowland_Watershed_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:lowland watershed]] '''[[:category:lowland watershed|Lowland Watersheds]]'''
We live in [[ecosystems]] where snow-fed [[headwaters]], and rain-fed [[:category:watershed|lowlands]] collect into [[floodplains]] and then through [[river deltas]] to enter [[the Salish Sea]] ringed by a mix of [[beaches]], [[embayments]] and [[headlands]].
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[[file:Floodplain_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:floodplain]] '''[[:category:floodplain|Floodplains]]'''
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==Why Join Us?==
Because you want to empower stewards of the Salish Sea ecosystem.  Because information is power.  We increase information flow among scientists, citizens, and public servants.
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===Scientists and Students===
*Describe [[sites]] where you have specific knowledge.
*Share your findings on different [[topics]] with hard to find [[documents]].
*Connect with restoration [[efforts]] as research sites.


[[file:Delta_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:river delta]] '''[[:category:river delta|River Deltas]]'''
===Citizens and Land Stewards===
*Provide local knowledge about the [[Sites and Places|sites and places]] in which you live.
*Better understand [[governments]], and find [[workgroups]] in your watershed.
*Track down or share [[documents]], or learn about how your lands provide [[ecosystem services]].


[[file:Coastal_Inlet_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:embayment]]   '''[[:category:embayment|Embayments]]'''
===Conservation Professionals===
*Post [[documents]] about [[topics]] that might otherwise get lost.
*Connect with local [[workgroups]] or document [[efforts]].
*Build shared knowledge about different [[ecosystems]]
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[[file:Beach_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:beach]]  '''[[:category:beach|Beaches]]'''
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[[file:Rocky_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:rocky]]  '''[[:category:rocky|Rocky Shorelines]]'''
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==Our Human Systems Framework==
 
We also wanted to capture the activites and interests of people.  The way people think and organize themselves often transcends ecological place.  We organize ouselves into [[workgroups]] which undertake [[efforts]] using shared [[resources]] often resulting in development of [[documents]], which add to our understanding of [[topics]].  The following page [[categories]] describe this landscape of human knowledge.
<div style="font-size: 1.5em">
[[file:Workgroup_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:workgroup]]  '''[[:category:workgroup|Workgroups]]'''
 
[[file:Effort_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:effort]]  '''[[:category:effort|Efforts]]'''
 
[[file:Resource_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:resource]]  '''[[:category:resource|Resources]]'''
 
[[file:Document_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:document]]  '''[[:category:document|Documents]]'''
 
[[file:Topic_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:topic]]  '''[[:category:topic|Topics]]'''
 
[[file:Topic_Icon.jpg|40px|link=:category:place]] '''[[:category:place|Places]]'''
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Our goal is to increase transparent interaction between ecosystem scientists, private citizens, and public servants.  This wiki allows you to  stitch together existing sources, into a coherent whole story, to break down barriers to information movement common to our institutions and busy lives.
 
==Scientists engage with the practice of restoration and protection==
Scientists oftens have very specialized areas of knowledge, only shared among close colleagues.  Ecosystem management both provides the opportunty for on-the-ground experiments (AKA [[adaptive management]]), but also requires interdisciplary understanding of complex systems.  Without the discipline of science, ecosystem management becomes less effective, less efficient, and more focussed on economic and political interests.  Scientists can use this wiki in several ways:
*'''Identify [[sites]] where you have specific knowledge or information.
*'''Report your contributions, and encourage students to contribute project work and liturature review that strengthens and synthesizes our understanding of [[systems]] and their [[attributes]].
*'''Find on-the-ground [[efforts]] that align with your research goals that could benefit from scientific involvement while providing large scale experiments to test ecological postulates.
 
==Citizens take ownership of ecosystem stewardship==
Citizens are the true cornerstone of conservation, but volunteers, advocates and neighbors are working by their bootstraps to develop the networks and strategies for their local situation.  There are many ways that this wiki can help citizens become more effectively engaged:
*'''Learn about what has been written about your ecosystem [[site]].
*'''Identify [[workgroups]] that are actively working in your site, or in similar [[systems]] to improve your [[networks]].
*'''Report on your [[workgroup]] and its [[efforts]] so that others are aware of your stewardship.
 
==Professionals share and distribute knowledge and evidence==
A vast volume of information generated through publically funding work doesn't get shared.  Projects, reports, observations are buried in unpublished "grey literature", or in the memories of agency staff.  When this information doesn't get added to our collective knowledge, we are wasting resources.  Professionals working for various governments or their consultants can both contribute and benefit from the wiki:
*'''Post [[documents]] that might otherwise be hard to find, either associated with a particular [[site]] or more generally related to [[systems]]
*'''Identify local [[workgroups]] or [[documents]] at [[sites]] where you find yourself working.
*'''Contribute to maintaining shared knowledge of [[systems]] and their [[attributes]] fitting to you expertise.

Revision as of 17:03, 12 February 2018

The Salish Sea, by S. Frelan

Click Icons to Browse...

WorkgroupsEffortsProductsPlacesTopicsHeadwatersLowland WatershedsFloodplainsRiver DeltasEmbaymentsBeachesHeadlandsEach wiki page provides information about a human system or ecosystem component, click to explore!

This website helps us work together to rebuild ecosystems. We share resources, information and ideas under a shared social contract. A wiki is a collection of cross-linked web pages and documents. Any user can create and edit pages and upload or download documents at any time. Our goal is to help each other find and synthesize information. Read more about The Big Picture...

Wikimission.png

Why a wiki?

Introduction.png

How does it work?


CreateUserAccountButton.PNG

Explore human system pages:

We work in human systems made of workgroups which use resources to complete efforts either building knowledge of topics or doing work in places. All this effort results in lots of documents. Master Topics are a good place to start exploring the structure of Salish Sea human systems.

Explore ecosystem pages:

We live in ecosystems where snow-fed headwaters, and rain-fed lowlands collect into floodplains and then through river deltas to enter the Salish Sea ringed by a mix of beaches, embayments and headlands.

Why Join Us?

Because you want to empower stewards of the Salish Sea ecosystem. Because information is power. We increase information flow among scientists, citizens, and public servants.

Scientists and Students

  • Describe sites where you have specific knowledge.
  • Share your findings on different topics with hard to find documents.
  • Connect with restoration efforts as research sites.

Citizens and Land Stewards

Conservation Professionals