Media and Stories
- Aimee Weldon: Restoring Saltmarsh Sparrow Habitat Podcast with Hazel Kahan
- Healing a Marsh in Connecticut: Reviving the Largest Saltmarsh in New England
- Thin Layer Deposition: One person’s trash is another person’s treasure – How dredged sediments can help rebuild drowning coastal marshes.
- Runnelling: Rising to the Challenge: Salt marsh restoration to heal historic wounds and combat climate change
- Runnelling: Building Great Marsh resiliency from the bottom-up
Read how biologists are healing human-made scars in tidal systems from colonial-era farming to 20th-century mosquito control. - Podcast: USFWS Talk on the Wildside Podcast: Episode 5 is about wetlands and includes a story about Saltmarsh sparrow and waterfowl habitat.
- PBS video clip on Saltmarsh Sparrow: Check out this very cool PBS video clip on saltmarsh birds and how they manage living in a tidal system.
- One person’s trash is another person’s treasure – How dredged sediments can help rebuild drowning coastal marshes
- Read all about the Crisis at the Edge of the Tide: The Decline of Saltmarsh Birds on the Atlantic Coast by Aimee Weldon and Mitch Hartley, published in the Fall 2018 Issue from The Wildlife Society.
- Rising to the Challenge: Salt marsh restoration to heal historic wounds and combat sea-level rise
- Building Great Marsh resiliency from the bottom-up
Read how biologists are healing man-made scars in tidal systems from colonial-era farming and 20th-century mosquito control. - USFWS Talk on the Wildside Podcast: Episode 5 is about wetlands and includes a story about Saltmarsh sparrow and waterfowl habitat.
- The New York Times wrote about the Saltmarsh Sparrow’s Fight to Keep Their Heads Above Water
- Webinar: Saltmarsh Sparrow Conservation in the North Atlantic Appalachian Region
- Webinar: Saltmarsh Sparrow Habitat Patch Priority Prioritization Tool
- Webinar: Three New Products for Saltmarsh Sparrow Conservation
- Webinar: Farmers in the Marsh
- Webinar: Saltmarsh Revegetation Through Runels
- Webinar: Using Dredged Sediment to Create Vanishing Habitats and Restore Tidal Wetlands
- NEAFWA Workshop Resources Document