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Co-Director Terrie Klinger Retires

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Co-Director Terrie Klinger Retires

The Washington Ocean Acidification Center announces that Dr. Terrie Klinger, founding co-director of the Center, has retired from her faculty position at the UW School of Marine and Environmental Affairs as of 1 January 2026. The Center wishes to deeply acknowledge and thank Terrie for her service and vision as she brought groundbreaking research on Washington’s native marine species to reality. CLICK TO READ MORE

Join WOAC, University of Bergen at One Ocean Week on Oct. 24th

The Washington Ocean Acidification Center will join the University of Bergen aboard the traditional sailing ship the Statsraad Lehmkuhl, for The Vast and Deep Ocean, part of the One Ocean Week series of events. Short presentations will be hosted throughout the event alongside scientific posters and demonstration tables. October 24th, 1-4 PM – Pier 66.

New Study: Pteropods Provide Early Insight Into Changing Ocean Conditions

Scientists have new information about how pteropods, tiny marine creatures so important to food webs they’re known as the “potato chips of the sea,” may fare under compounding environmental stressors.“We found that changing ocean conditions affect pteropods in multiple, overlapping ways, some of which could also be detrimental for long-term pteropod population sustainability ” Nina Bednaršek, a biological oceanographer at Oregon State University’s Hatfield Marine Science Center and the paper’s lead author, says. 

WOAC Co-Director Jan Newton wins Marine Technology Society Award

Congratulations to Jan Newton for receiving the 2022 Lockheed Martin Award for Ocean Science and Engineering, courtesy of the Marine Technology Society (MTS)! This award is presented to an individual who has demonstrated the highest degree of technical accomplishment in the field of marine science, engineering, or technology. 

No “Safe Space” for 12 key ocean species on North American West Coast

For the generations who grew up watching Finding Nemo, it might not come as a surprise that the West Coast has our own version of the underwater ocean highway – the California Current marine ecosystem (CCME). New research led by Dr. Jennifer Sunday from McGill University and Dr. Terrie Klinger from the Washington Ocean Acidification Center within EarthLab at the University of Washington warns that climate impacts will significantly affect twelve economically and culturally important species home to the CCME over the next 80 years.

UN Ocean Conference Side Event | “Ocean Acidification: Co-designing data connections to underserved communities for equitable outcomes”

The University of Washington’s Washington Ocean Acidification Center and Ocean Nexus Center are hosting a side event “Ocean Acidification: Co-designing data connections to underserved communities for equitable outcomes” during the United Nations Ocean Conference in Lisbon, Portugal, on June 30th, 2022. The event will highlight successful partnerships with Indigenous, Small Island Developing States (SIDS), and other underserved communities on co-designing activities for adaptation and response strategies.