From Wild Salmon Center <[email protected]>
Subject A boost for our BC salmon DNA library, plus springers, dams, and Stronghold on paperback.
Date February 25, 2021 5:49 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
And introducing our new Oregon Water Initiative.


To view this email online, paste this link into your browser:
[link removed]





([link removed])

In B.C., our Salmon Genome Project Gets a Boost

For marine fishers on British Columbia's Central Coast, no practical tools currently exist to avoid catching vulnerable salmon runs alongside the healthy stocks they target. But help is on the way from a ground-breaking new wild salmon genome project co-led by the Wild Salmon Center and Simon Fraser University. This month, this exciting project got a boost ([link removed]) from a $250,000 matching grant from Genome BC's GeneSolve program, which will fund the genetic decoding and archiving of 118 distinct sockeye populations native to B.C.’s Central Coast.

([link removed])

Introducing WSC's Oregon
Water Initiative
Oregon’s 19th century water rights system prioritized water withdrawals over the value of flowing rivers. Our new initiative focuses on adapting this system for a changing world ([link removed]), while addressing the growing threats to Oregon’s streams and the salmon they support. 

([link removed])

Stories and Actions to
Save Spring Chinook
This month, we published "Orcas and Actions ([link removed])," Part IV of our First Salmon, Last Chance ([link removed]) story series ([link removed]), which calls for big actions to save this iconic fish. Right as we wrapped this special series, exciting news broke: a $34B proposal to bring down Idaho ([link removed]).

([link removed])

Timber Negotiations
Kick Off in Oregon
This month, negotiations began between timber and conservation parties, including WSC's own Bob Van Dyk. The goal is a Habitat Conservation Plan for 10 million acres of private forestland, ready in time for the 2022 legislative session ([link removed]).

([link removed])

Stronghold on Paperback!Veteran journalist Tom Brokaw calls it “a remarkable account.” David James Duncan, author of The River Why, says it “reads like an international thriller.” STRONGHOLD, the story of WSC President Guido Rahr and his improbable rise as a global conservation leader, is now available in paperback ([link removed]).

([link removed])

Make Your Employer Work for You!

Did you know that $4-7 billion in matching gift funds go unclaimed
every year?

Contact your HR department and see if your company will match your gift to WSC—doubling your impact for wild salmon rivers at no extra cost to you. 

Learn More About Employer Matched Gifts ([link removed])

([link removed])

The mission of the Wild Salmon Center is to promote the conservation and sustainable use of wild salmon ecosystems across the Pacific Rim.

Photo/image credits (from top): WSC Science Director Matt Sloat in B.C.'s Nieumiamus Creek (Scott Carlson); B.C. spring Chinook (Barrie Kovish); OR Rogue Butte Creek (Brian Kelley); Oregon Gov. Kate Brown and timber pact negotiators, early 2020 (Emily Vaughan-Klickman/Crag Law Center); Stronghold paperback cover (cover photo: Ken Morrish); Bristol Bay bear and sockeye (Ben Knight).





721 NW 9th Ave Suite 300 | Portland, OR 97209 US

This email was sent to [email protected].
To ensure that you continue receiving our emails,
please add us to your address book or safe list.

manage your preferences ([link removed])
opt out ([link removed]) using TrueRemove(r).

Got this as a forward? Sign up ([link removed]) to receive our future emails.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis