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It's true, we're changing our name!

Friends of Skagit Beaches was created in 2007 to mobilize and educate Skagit County residents for the protection and restoration of the marine environment that we live beside. Over the years, our projects have expanded beyond Fidalgo Island and Skagit County. We now have volunteers, members, and donors located in diverse parts of the Puget Sound region.

We discovered that people beyond Fidalgo Island want to contribute their time and resources to Friends. In return, they ask that we provide organized projects and activities that serve their local community too. Growing as an organization has enabled us to have a wider service area and deploy project that have value across the Puget Sound and North Sound areas. Our successful Stormwater Monitoring project does this.

Over the next few years we will develop ways to provide our projects, events, activities and share information with people throughout the Salish Sea region. For that  reason we decided it was time to rename our nonprofit to reflect this broader service area.

We decided to go with the name Friends of the Salish Sea and began the name change process shortly after a vote of our Board of Directors and membership at our Annual Meeting in January 2024.  We learned the process has a lot of steps and organizations to contact.  We are nearing completion of the process and awaiting the final approval from the Internal Revenue Service, which we hope to receive by the end of the year.

We will be transitioning away from this website to a new one at the link below.  We will continue with this transition and recreating some of our legacy content from past projects such as the Skagit Plastics Reduction and Recycling project and Trail Tales.  In the meantime, we suggest you save this link and use the new site starting now!  Thanks to all our members and donors who help to make the work we do possible.

Friends of the Salish Sea

Opalescent Nudibranch

Opalescent Nudibranch

The Opalescent Nudibranch ("noo-di-brank") is a beautiful mollusk without a shell. Related to snails and other animals with shells, nudibranchs are also kin to the slugs in your garden. That's why the many species of nudibranchs are sometimes called "sea slugs." On the west coast the most common of the larger ones is the Opalescent Nudibranch. Usually no more than an inch and a half long, this creature can compress to half that or stretch to double its length.

Many nudibranchs are very colorful. The Opalescent Nudibranch varies, but its body is usually yellowish-green with orange lines on top and electric blue stripes running down its sides. Many fringe-like projections cover the creature's back, each one tipped with white above an orange band. These fringes, called "cerata," take in oxygen and also contain part of the animal's digestive system.

Though they look delicate, Opalescent Nudibranchs are aggressive and will eat anything small enough for them to take on, including others of their own species. When this creature attacks an anemone (another kind of marine animal), it bites some of the tentacles that make anemones look like flowers. These tentacles have stinging cells to ward off attackers, but the nudibranch seems unaffected by them. In fact, it swallows the stinging cells which then travel through its body to end up at the tips of the nudibranch's cerata. There they become part of its own defense. It may be that the nudibranch's bright colors warn predators like fish away from the painful effects of those stingers.

When you're at the beach, look carefully into tidepools, among eelgrass blades, or even on mudflats, and you may spot this beautiful mollusk without a shell.

In Friends Notes

Autumn 2022 starts our second two-year stormwater sampling campaign. This t...
UPDATE: Grant for Fidalgo Bay and City of Anacortes stormwater monitoring. ...
Compiled by Chris Wood with contributions from Ellen Anderson, Betty Carter...

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