Trout Unlimited is the nation’s leading conservation organization uniting people behind clean waters, healthy fish, and thriving communities. Are you a reporter on deadline? Reach out to one of our communications directors to get the information you need. Working on a longer piece about trout and salmon, rivers and streams, and the conservation issues facing them? Scroll on to see how Trout Unlimited scientists, policy experts and local, on-the-ground field staffers can help advance your story. Looking for ideas? Check out our storylines and press releases.
Searching for a subject-matter expert? We can help. From fisheries biologists and water policy experts to stream restoration specialists and lawyers, Trout Unlimited has more than 300 staffers working nationally and in their communities to protect and restore healthy waters and healthy fisheries. If you’re not seeing what you’re after, that doesn’t mean TU can’t help. Please reach out to one of the communications directors listed above.
Conservation
Chris Wood
President and CEO Arlington, Va. Forestry, mining reform, Good Sam mine cleanup, water policy, Snake River dams, public lands, fisheries
National Restoration Director Missoula, Mont. Fisheries and habitat restoration strategies; native trout; Forest Service, Fish & Wildlife Service, NOAA partnerships
Mid-Atlantic Coldwater Habitat Restoration Associate Director Circleville, W.V. Eastern brook trout, stream restoration, Farm Bill programs, fish passage, community science, fisheries biology and management
Director of Federal Relations Anchorage, Ala. Federal agencies, infrastructure and conservation funding, Alaska, Bristol Bay / Pebble mine, Tongass National Forest, Roadless Rule, old growth, salmon
Fisheries Science Director Boise, Idaho Fisheries ecology and population biology; multispecies and watershed approaches to freshwater fish conservation; fisheries monitoring
After the world’s largest dam removal, what’s next?
On the Klamath River, four dams are coming out in the largest removal project in history. What does that mean for recovery of one of the West’s great salmon and steelhead runs?
Once-in-a-generation infrastructure investments are finally getting on the ground. But it’s not just bridges, roads, airports, electric vehicles and the like. This historic funding has natural infrastructure projects blooming across the country, from man-made beaver dams that store water and act as firebreaks to retrofitted culverts that reopen fragmented ecosystems and mitigate flooding.
Abandoned mines, the most pervasive water pollution problem in the nation
Some 40 percent of headwater streams in the West are polluted by abandoned mines from a century’s worth of extraction. Those who want to clean them up are hamstrung by liability laws that treats them as if they were the polluters themselves.
For trout, salmon and steelhead, the picture is forbidding: They are coldwater fish in a warming world. Projections show the footprint for native trout species shrinking over the coming century. What can be done to prevent the demise of America’s two dozen native trout species?
“On the back of a determined West Virginian—and private landowners and government agencies alike—the vaunted and cherished brook trout just might be making a miracle comeback.”
With beavers missing from the landscape, humans do the dirty work
“Scientists know beavers create landscapes better adapted to climate change. Here’s what they’re doing in ecosystems too degraded to support the critters.”
Opinion: The Potomac River is an American success story, thanks to the Clean Water Act
“The Trump administration’s announcement puts at risk nearly 50 years of progress making rivers such as the Cuyahoga and Potomac more fishable and swimmable.”
Biden moves to ban most old-growth logging in national forests
“The most ancient trees still standing in America’s national forests would get new protections under a proposal the Biden administration announced Tuesday that would ban most logging in groves that play a vital role in fighting climate change.”