Woman searching for clams and mussels in a tidepool.

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PHOTO (above): Woman searching for clams and mussels in a tidepool.
Shutterstock.com / Simone van den Berg

Puget Sound Partnership Home
A group works on a vegetation planting at Dalby Creek in Union, and the Mason Conservation District and Community Nearshore Restoration Program helped out that day. Learn how to get involved.| Emily Piper
A group works on a vegetation planting at Dalby Creek in Union, and the Mason Conservation District and Community Nearshore Restoration Program helped out that day. Learn how to get involved.| Emily Piper

Demonstration at Klhowya. | Skagit Fisheries Enhancement Group.

Demonstration at Klhowya. | Skagit Fisheries Enhancement Group.

Taking length frequency. | Steve Quinell, WDFW
Measuring English sole during a survey. | Steve Quinell, WDFW

 

What you can do

You can help be a partner in protecting and restoring Puget Sound by making changes in your daily life. Sometimes the changes are simple, such as finding alternatives to toxic household cleaners. Other changes may be more complicated, such as installing a rain garden to collect stormwater runoff on your property. But we all have a part to play in protecting Puget Sound. Thanks for doing your part to help!

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Puget Sound Partnership
P.O. Box 40900, Olympia, Washington 98504-0900
Toll-free: 800.54.SOUND | Phone: 360.725.5444 | Email: info@psp.wa.gov

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Banner photos: Crab, Anenomes, and Wolf eel by Jennifer Vanderhoof.

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