Welcome to Salish Sea Restoration: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 17:20, 29 July 2013
- Follow us on Facebook
- Five Newest Pages
- Visualizing Ecosystem Land Management Assessments (VELMA) Model
- Suquamish Tribe
- Toft & Heerhartz 2015 juvenile salmon movement and shoreline armoring
- City of Port Townsend
- Northwest Watershed Institute
- Five Newest Documents
- Five Recent Page Edits
- Visualizing Ecosystem Land Management Assessments (VELMA) Model
- Suquamish Tribe
- Shoreline Monitoring Database
- Toft & Heerhartz 2015 juvenile salmon movement and shoreline armoring
- Little Fishtrap Watershed
This website helps us work together on ecosystem restoration. We share resources, information and ideas under a shared social contract. A wiki is a collection of interlinked web pages and documents. Any user can create and edit pages and share documents at any time.
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. 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.
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We Invite You to Join UsOur goal is to increase information flow, to empower people as stewards of the Salish Sea ecosystem. We aim to connect scientists, citizens, and public servants. In this wiki you can locate or post information about you and your network, their ecosystem work, and the places we live.
Scientists and Students
Citizens
Conservation Professionals
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