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A group of three or four dolphins swimming closely together in choppy gray waters, with their dorsal fins visible above the surface.

Risso’s dolphins are easily recognizable by their light color and extensive scratches and scars on their bodies. This rare visitor to the Salish Sea feeds almost exclusively on squid and is most commonly found in relatively warm tropical to temperate waters over the outer continental shelf and slope.

Puget Sound map with local watershed group boundaries.

A 2025 article in the journal Environmental Management analyzes the use of structured decision making (SDM) with four different watershed groups to understand the governance factors that facilitated the use of SDM as a decision support tool.

A 2025 article in the journal Conservation Biology examines the integration of human well-being indicators into regional conservation efforts.

A 2025 article in the journal Conservation Biology examines the integration of human well-being indicators into regional conservation efforts.

A red boathouse extends from a wooden pier over calm, misty waters with forested shorelines under an overcast sky.

Low dissolved oxygen levels put aquatic life in Puget Sound at risk – but not everywhere. A combination of careful monitoring efforts and powerful computer models are now enabling scientists to identify which areas of our regional waters are most prone to low oxygen levels, when, and why. This article is part of a series of reports funded by King

A researcher in red clothing aboard a "CETACEAN RESEARCH & RESPONSE" boat monitoring an orca swimming nearby in sparkling blue waters with forested coastline in the background.

Artificial intelligence is emerging as a powerful new tool for whale identification. New software can be adapted and used to identify any animal with a dorsal fin on its back.

: A beaver emerges from a wire trap cage surrounded by tall reeds and wetland vegetation.

Beavers are typically associated with freshwater environments, but scientists have learned that they also survive and thrive in the shoreline marshes of the Salish Sea. New research is shedding light on the vital connection between tidal beavers and salmon.