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Yet, the combination of abundant spring rain and weak upwelling from the Pacific Ocean means Puget Sound waters are still fresher than at any time in the past 17 years.
While the abundance of jellyfish is lower this year, our
warm water temperatures, especially in central Puget Sound, are accompanied by
large rafts of drifting macroalgae. What else did we see on our Eyes Over Puget
Sound overflight? Diverse blooms in colors of green, orange and red-brown in
many our inlets.
We are also checking to see how if our benthic invertebrate
community is changing. We are monitoring and measuring samples of these
critters that live in the sediments of Puget Sound at our long-term monitoring
stations. We’re gathering information so we have baselines to see if any
long-term change is occurring among this sensitive part of the Puget Sound
ecosystem.
This year, we’re getting great hands-on assistance from our
Washington Conservation Corps intern, Nicole Marks. To see more about the
project, check out the great poster
Nicole has created.
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