Event Details
When:
Thu, Jan 15, 2026, 4:30pm - 5:20pm
Location:
Online: Zoom
In-Person at WWU:
Academic West 204
Price:
Free
Brought to you by:
Salish Sea Institute, College of the Environment, The Foundation for WWU & Alumni
Description
Check out this video to watch the Moving Toward Solutions.
Environmental science is good at problem identification. But once we have identified a problem how we do move toward making positive change and detecting that change in noisy systems? Solutions thinking is necessary to alter the environmental trajectory in urban sea systems, like the Salish Sea, where urbanization and climate change create compounding impacts. Calls for improving ecosystem function to improve resilience and benefit species like Pacific salmon have resulted in ecosystem restoration projects that are expanding in size and scope. The need for ecosystem assessment in estuaries and urban seas with myriad stressors means novel approaches are needed to identify problems, generate solutions, and evaluate change. Cumulative Effects Evaluation is one approach for bringing disparate data sets together in a new way. Using an example for salmon habitat restoration in Whidbey Basin, Dr. Sobocinski will explain the framework, the causal analysis at the base of it, and provide additional examples of how urban sea systems can benefit from data synthesis, from models to community engagement.
The Environmental Speaker Series is free and open to the public. Talks are held each Thursday at 4:30pm in Academic Instructional Center West, room 204. Join us at WWU or online on Zoom!
Featuring:
Dr. Kathryn L. Sobocinski is an applied marine ecologist focusing on fishes, fish habitats, and impacts of human disturbance and climate change in coastal ecosystems. Kathryn currently works on projects related to salmon in marine ecosystems, interactions between salmon and their prey and competitors, quantitatively assessing the cumulative effects of estuarine restoration for salmon, and anthropogenic change within the Salish Sea and beyond. Kathryn is an Associate Professor in the Department of Environmental Sciences and the Marine and Coastal Science program at Western Washington University. She has a BA from Connecticut College, MS from University of Washington, School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, and a PhD in Marine Science from the College of William & Mary, Virginia Institute of Marine Science.
Questions and Accommodations
- Your point of contact for this event is The Foundation for WWU & Alumni. Call (360) 650-3353 or email Alumni@wwu.edu.
- Advance notice for disability accommodations and special needs is appreciated. Please mention your needs when registering.
- There will be auto-captions for the Zoom webinar.
Visitor Parking at WWU on Weekdays
- Mon-Fri, 7:00am-4:30pm: limited paid parking is available at the south C lots and north 6V and 7G lots.
- Purchase your permit at the lot pay stations or use the Parkmobile app.
- More parking details for campus visitors are available online.
Parking at WWU on Weekdays for Visitors with Disabilities
- Mon-Fri, 7:00am-4:30pm: both a WWU permit and state disability placard are needed.
- Purchase your permit at the pay stations in lot C or 6V or use the Parkmobile app (use Zone 1200). This allows parking in any disability space. If these are full, you can use a non-reserved space nearby.
- More parking details for campus visitors with disabilities are available online.
The views expressed by our speakers do not necessarily reflect those of Western Washington University.