Return of the Coho
November 14, 2008 by Jody Zaitlin
Every winter, coho salmon return to coastal streams, though only 1 percent of the half million fish that once filled local streams. But you can still see them, and even help them survive.
November 14, 2008 by Jody Zaitlin
Every winter, coho salmon return to coastal streams, though only 1 percent of the half million fish that once filled local streams. But you can still see them, and even help them survive.
July 01, 2008 by David Loeb
No one can accuse me of being an early adopter—the kind of person who rushes to embrace new technologies. I …
April 01, 2008 by Aleta George
During the 2004-2005 winter salmon spawning season in Redwood Creek, which passes through Muir Woods National Monument before reaching the …
April 01, 2007 by Aleta George
From November to February this past winter, biologists scoured lower Russian River tributaries in search of spawning coho salmon. The …
January 01, 2006 by Kevin Cutler
“The Dream Given by You: Welcoming the Coho Back to West Marin”
Our October-December 2001 issue highlighted the ecological and …
April 01, 2002 by Marilyn Smulyan
Assisted by generous early rains, astounding numbers of salmon swam up Lagunitas and San Geronimo creeks (on the northwest side …
April 01, 2002 by Marilyn Smulyan
Over the past few years, local conservationists have devoted a fair amount of energy to purchasing land along the spectacular …
October 01, 2001 by Jules Evens
The return of endangered coho salmon to their ancestral spawning grounds in this west Marin watershed is an essential component of the connective tissue that holds a fragmented ecosystem together. Greeting the salmon tethers us to the landscape’s seasonal rhythms and reawakens a lineage that goes back to the first inhabitants of this place.
January 01, 2001 by Marilyn Smulyan
Late fall and winter are the time to witness the return of endangered coho salmon to their natal streams in …