Salmon home

By Nathan Rice
Restoration Biologist
Lummi Nation Natural Resources

Salmon are essential in so many ways – to our health, our cultures, our economy, and as the thread that holds Northwest ecosystems together. That iconic species like Chinook and steelhead are threatened in Puget Sound, where I was born, raised, and lived most of my life, has always felt deeply unacceptable. At my first work party with NSEA more than two decades ago, I was inspired by the work to restore our streams and recover the salmon that define our home. It just made sense. Little did I know at the time, that experience would guide my career for years to come.

A few years later, way back in 2005, I joined NSEA as a Volunteer Coordinator, where I organized riparian planting parties and helped with monitoring and education programs. Engaging diverse community members in restoring habitat for the salmon we all value was very rewarding. Restoration often feels like putting things back together, and bringing people together to do that work was particularly meaningful.

My experience at NSEA helped start my career in fish and wildlife research and restoration, from surveying salmon spawners across the Nooksack watershed, to restoring Puget Sound shorelines and surveying marbled murrelet habitat – another threatened species that ties together our marine and terrestrial ecosystems. After I finished my Master’s in Environmental Science at Western Washington University, I felt pulled back to the work of ecological restoration, to apply science to pressing problems and build solutions to recover threatened species.

In 2018, I started working for Lummi Nation as a restoration biologist and soon found myself working with NSEA once again, many years later. Lummi Nation has been partnering with NSEA to restore Porter Creek, a tributary to the Middle Fork Nooksack River, where steelhead and multiple salmon species spawn. In 2020, we removed part of a decades-old berm to reconnect the creek with its historical floodplain. In November, just over a year after restoration, the creek reclaimed an old, forested channel that is quickly developing into quality habitat for salmon and other species. This February, the first salmon redd was documented in this new channel – the first of many more to come.  

Porter Creek’s new spawning habitat

Today, when I see how much the alder and Doug fir saplings that we planted years ago have grown, the impact of those NSEA work parties feels very real. When I multiply that by the hundreds of projects that NSEA, Lummi, and all of our restoration partners work on, it feels like hope for a future of healthy watersheds, whole communities, and abundant salmon runs returning home again and again.

Alex Levell in the new Porter Creek channel

Meet the Spring 2022 Community Program Interns

Meet NSEA’s Spring 2021 Community Program Intern team! From left to right: Emma Burgess, Aja Irons, Allison Greener, Megan Fritz, Zara Wiley, and Olivia Marsh.

This spring, NSEA welcomes six new Community Program Interns! This position is part of our Future Leaders of Whatcom Waters (FLOW) Program which provides real-world experience and opportunities for professional development to gain skills for future career pathways.  This team of interns will help facilitate NSEA’s Students for Salmon education field trips and lead volunteers in habitat restoration at community work parties through the Stream Stewards Program. Their work is critical to NSEA’s mission and our ongoing salmon recovery efforts.

Let’s meet the team!

Emma Burgess (she/her): Emma was born and raised in the Puget Sound area. She is a junior at Western Washington University studying Environmental Science with an emphasis in Freshwater and Terrestrial Ecology. After graduating, she plans to join the Peace Corps in South America as an Environmental Conservation Promoter. In her free time, you will find Emma in the mountains rock climbing, studying botany, and swimming in the rivers.

Megan Fritz (she/her): Megan is originally from Wayzata, Minnesota, but moved to Bellingham two years ago to attend school at Western Washington University. She is currently in her second year and plans to major in Environmental Studies at the College of the Environment. When not in class or working with NSEA, Megan enjoys writing music, film photography, and crocheting.

Allison Greener (she/her): Allison is an environmental science student at Western Washington University preparing to graduate this spring! Along with her internship with NSEA, she is also an intern for Learning Environment Action Discovery (LEAD), an environmental restoration and stewardship organization at Western. During her free time, she can be found reading, doing film photography, gardening, walking around Bellingham with her fiancé, or nerding out playing Dungeons and Dragons.

Aja Irons (she/her): Aja is an alumnus of Western Washington University and graduated in 2018 with a BA in music and a minor in Education and Social Justice. She is native to Washington and is a member of the Citizen’s Climate Lobby for the Tacoma Chapter. She loves exploring the outdoors and hiking with friends in her free time. Aja is excited to join this internship and learn more about salmon conservation and connect with the greater community.

Olivia Marsh (she/they): Olivia moved to Bellingham five years ago from Colorado to study at Western Washington University. Last year, they graduated with a degree in Environmental Science and a minor in English. In the future, she hopes to work on making environmental science more accessible to everyone. For fun, Olivia enjoys reading, hiking, trying new crafts, and practicing tarot.