Washington’s Inside Waters

Cascadia’s Research in the Inside Waters of Washington State

Overview

Cascadia Research Collective, based in Olympia, Washington, has been studying marine mammals in the inland waters of Washington State – including Puget Sound, the Strait of Juan de Fuca, and the San Juan Islands – for more than four decades. Through vessel surveys, photo-identification, tagging, strandings, and entanglement response, Cascadia works to understand the ecology, recovery, and conservation needs of whales and dolphins in the complex coastal habitats of the Salish Sea.


Focus Species & Key Projects

Humpback Whales

Gray Whales

  • Long-term monitoring of the “Sounders”, a group of gray whales that relies on Puget Sound as they feed during the spring.

Harbor Porpoise & Other Small Cetaceans

Entanglement & Stranding Response


Methods & Tools

  • Photo-Identification to recognize individuals for migratory movements, population trends, human-interactions rates, and survival estimates.
  • Biologging & Video Tags to reveal underwater foraging behavior.
  • Drone Images and Tag Deployments to capture full body documentation and deploy suction-cup tags with less disturbance to the animal.
  • Vessel Surveys for population monitoring and distribution mapping.
  • Stranding Response & Necropsy Work to study health and mortality causes.
  • Entanglement Response to free whales while gathering data needed to reduce risk and improve animal welfare.

Partnerships

Cascadia collaborates with NOAA Fisheries, the Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife, local non-profits, research institutes, universities, and local communities to share data, coordinate response, and inform conservation actions.


Why It Matters

The inside waters of Washington are becoming increasingly important habitat for large whales. Cascadia’s research helps identify how these animals use these waters, what threats they face, and how people can reduce risks—guiding science-based conservation to protect whales for generations to come.


What you can do to help!

  • Report dead, injured, or stranded marine mammals
    Call the West Coast Marine Mammal Stranding Hotline at 1-866-767-6114 for strandings throughout Washington State.

    Call or text Cascadia’s stranding hotline at 360-791-9555 or email strandings@cascadiaresearch.org for large whale strandings in Washington State or strandings of any marine mammal in Thurston or Mason counties. We will want to know the date, time, location, description of the animal, and your name and contact information.
  • Support Cascadia
    Help us keep whales safe in Washington’s Inside Waters and beyond! 
    Donate here or contact us to learn about more ways you can support our work.

    With future federal funding uncertain, we are counting on you to be guardians for these ocean giants. Your donation helps ensure our trained responders can remain ready to act, that our research continues, and that progress toward an entanglement-free future doesn’t stall.
  • Educate and Stay Informed
    Share what you’ve learned! Encourage others to report entanglements, support response efforts, and get involved. Stay up to date on our research and response efforts by following us on social media!

Together we can create a safer ocean for whales – starting with the ones who need us most

Images taken under and research & response activities conducted under NOAA permit #’s 16111, 18786, 21678, 24359, and 28850.

All response activities are conducted by authorized responders under NOAA permit #24359, following international and national safety standards that prohibit entering the water and prioritize the safety of both whale and crew.