Salmon
Fishing
Imagine an ordinary school classroom - ordinary except for the 500 salmon fry swimming in a corner aquarium. Or envision a group of students planting vegetation along their local creek and assessing the creek's health through surveys and water quality tests. Or you might imagine opening your morning paper, turning on the radio, or watching a television news program and learning about community salmon issues from neighborhood school kids.
You don't need to imagine these activities, they are happening everyday all across Washington as a part of the Department of Fish and Wildlife's Salmon in the Classroom Project.

Currently,
about 600 schools statewide participate in the Salmon in the Classroom
Project. Students receive 500 eggs from a designated hatchery and care
for "their" salmon while learning about life histories and habitat requirements.
By becoming salmon stewards, these students are more aware of local waterways
and more conscious of and knowledgeable about water quality issues. Students
release the salmon as fry after studying the streams and creeks into which
the fish will be released.
Application Process
All Salmon
in the Classroom projects begin with an application to obtain salmon eggs
from the Department of Fish and Wildlife. This application is reviewed
by staff biologists to ensure species and habitat suitability. The application
process requires review by biologists both
within
the agency and from outside agencies involved in salmon management.
Therefore, as the time line on the next page shows, applications must be
received by the first of each preceding December, almost a full year in
advance of an anticipated project. This schedule also allows time to assess
equipment needs for each of the new schools applying to the project. In
some cases, the department may be able to provide partial aquarium setups
depending on outside donations or turnover; however, each school should
be prepared to secure its own aquarium and refrigeration equipment (approximately
$800).
Equipment
Needs
What
is Salmon in the Classroom?

It's
students ...
For
more information:
Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife
Aquatic
Education Program
600
Capitol Way N
Olympia
WA 98501-1091
(360)
586-3106
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