A class introduces Puget Sound students to environmental policy by examining the challenges facing the Pacific Northwest's most famous fish.
Perched on a log above the Mashel River a few miles from the Puget Sound campus, Daniel Sherman explains the complex and often harrowing plight of perhaps the most iconic creature in the Pacific Northwest: the salmon.
Decades of logging have removed trees and gravel crucial to salmon鈥檚 survival, Sherman says. In addition, the water temperature is rising and the river鈥檚 levels are low鈥攖he log Sherman is sitting on in the video, alongside his colleague, geology professor Kena Fox-Dobbs, is actually part of an 鈥渆ngineered logjam鈥 to impede the river鈥檚 flow and help restore some of the salmon鈥檚 natural habitat.
What Sherman鈥攑rofessor of environmental policy and decision making and director of the university鈥檚 Sound Policy Institute鈥攁nd his colleagues hope to accomplish is to use the story of the salmon to tell a wider story about the Pacific Northwest. And they鈥檝e structured an entire class, ENVR 200, Introduction to the Environment, around that narrative, supplementing classroom work with a series of field trips to discuss the environmental history鈥 and fraught future鈥攐f the region.