Streaming Media
Presentation Abstract
The Salish Sea supports an abundance of marine invertebrates that play critical roles in food webs and fisheries. Between climate change and intensifying local human impacts, species in the region face a growing list of threats, with the potential for population-level changes and cascading effects within nearshore ecosystems. Across our inland sea, coastal communities are poised to contribute to meaningful monitoring and science and, in doing so, enhance community capacity, ocean literacy, and environmental engagement. Working with communities, organizations, and Nations from across the Salish Sea, we are mobilizing a network of community scientists to monitor invertebrate communities and populations. In this decade-long initiative, we combine three approaches to monitor benthic and pelagic invertebrates, focusing on dynamics of recruitment and reproduction across a mosaic of social-ecological conditions. These methodologies are integrated with efforts at both regional and global scales, spanning international boundaries and producing useful data relevant within broad contexts. Improving our understanding of the reproduction, dispersal, and recruitment of marine invertebrates, can inform the management of species that hold significant cultural, ecological, and commercial importance. By combining accessible scientific tools with community momentum and place-based knowledge, this initiative brings a multiplicity of voices to the table to enhance collaboration and inspire stewardship in the Salish Sea.
Session Title
Poster Session 4: People Working Together to Protect the Salish Sea
Conference Track
SSE14: Posters
Conference Name
Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference (2022 : Online)
Document Type
Event
SSEC Identifier
SSE-posters-154
Start Date
27-4-2022 4:30 PM
End Date
27-4-2022 5:00 PM
Type of Presentation
Poster
Genre/Form
conference proceedings; presentations (communicative events)
Contributing Repository
Digital content made available by University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University.
Subjects – Topical (LCSH)
Marine invertebrates--Salish Sea (B.C. and Wash.); Food chains (Ecology)--Salish Sea (B.C. and Wash.); Marine ecology--Salish Sea (B.C. and Wash.)
Geographic Coverage
Salish Sea (B.C. and Wash.)
Rights
Copying of this document in whole or in part is allowable only for scholarly purposes. It is understood, however, that any copying or publication of this document for commercial purposes, or for financial gain, shall not be allowed without the author's written permission.
Type
Text
Language
English
Format
application/pdf
Included in
Fresh Water Studies Commons, Marine Biology Commons, Natural Resources and Conservation Commons, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology Commons
Sentinels of Change: Engaging communities to monitor marine invertebrates in the Salish Sea
The Salish Sea supports an abundance of marine invertebrates that play critical roles in food webs and fisheries. Between climate change and intensifying local human impacts, species in the region face a growing list of threats, with the potential for population-level changes and cascading effects within nearshore ecosystems. Across our inland sea, coastal communities are poised to contribute to meaningful monitoring and science and, in doing so, enhance community capacity, ocean literacy, and environmental engagement. Working with communities, organizations, and Nations from across the Salish Sea, we are mobilizing a network of community scientists to monitor invertebrate communities and populations. In this decade-long initiative, we combine three approaches to monitor benthic and pelagic invertebrates, focusing on dynamics of recruitment and reproduction across a mosaic of social-ecological conditions. These methodologies are integrated with efforts at both regional and global scales, spanning international boundaries and producing useful data relevant within broad contexts. Improving our understanding of the reproduction, dispersal, and recruitment of marine invertebrates, can inform the management of species that hold significant cultural, ecological, and commercial importance. By combining accessible scientific tools with community momentum and place-based knowledge, this initiative brings a multiplicity of voices to the table to enhance collaboration and inspire stewardship in the Salish Sea.