
Decolonizing Salmon Rhetoric for a Resilient Future
Dr. Cutcha Rising Baldy, Department Chair Native American Studies, Cal Poly Humboldt, has an interesting perspective on how colonization has impacted salmon, ecosystem health and the future of our society.

Partner Feature: Trout Unlimited’s Beaver and Beaver Dam Analog Powered Restoration Program
*Submitted by Trout Unlimited Once numbering in the hundreds of millions, beavers played a principal role in North America in how water moved through the landscape. Beaver dams and their

UCSRB Snowpack Update
* Written by Ryan Niemeyer Spring has begun! In our valley bottoms the grass has started to green up and spring flowers have begun to emerge. This is also the

NUTRIENT ENHANCEMENT: CRITICAL TO THE HEALTH OF RIVER ECOSYSTEMS
* Contributed by Jason Lundgren, Cascade Fisheries Historical estimates of salmon returning to the Columbia River basin range from 10-16 million, while modern returns average one million fish annually. The

February Science on the Street
Ecosphere – 2023 – Sorel – Juvenile life history diversity is associated with lifetime individual heterogeneity AbstractDifferences in the life history pathways (LHPs) of juvenile animals are oftenassociated with differences

Upper Columbia February Snow and Water Update
* Written by Ryan Niemeyer Winter solstice is well behind us and Spring is just around the corner. On an average year, early February means we are three-quarters of the