Sarah Trent

@sftrent

Journalist reporting where enviro & daily life meet: climate disasters, conservation, supply chains, etc. In & more. grad.

Portland, OR
Joined December 2008

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  1. Retweeted

    When women lead in conservation, indicators of success often go up — yet they are routinely excluded. Could a group of local leaders in the Philippines be a model? Read the latest from Earth Journalism Scholar , originally in :

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  2. Retweeted
    15 Nov 2021

    Pro sports leagues have historically used their position as cultural trendsetters to promote luxury emissions. But they don't have to... My new paper in : "COVID-19 disruption demonstrates win-win climate solutions for major league sports"

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  3. 18 Nov 2021

    Dr. Aileen Maypa, a conservation biologist working to restore reefs & fisheries in the Philippines, has repeatedly seen how women's involvement transforms outcomes. Men “are looking at the now,” she said. “Women are looking at the future.”

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  4. Retweeted

    When women lead in conservation, indicators of success often go up — yet they are routinely excluded. Could a group of local leaders in the Philippines provide a model?

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  5. Retweeted
    15 Nov 2021

    Beyond excited to see the wonderful Robyn James’ research on gender equity & conservation success in the NYT

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  6. Retweeted

    The six-author study showed that in countries from Nepal to Cameroon, Australia to Canada, women are excluded from roles in conservation and natural resource management. But…

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  7. 15 Nov 2021

    Robyn James of knows firsthand the discrimination & violence women face leading conservation projects worldwide. But when they do, her research helps show, environmental outcomes improve.

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  8. Retweeted
    15 Nov 2021

    A huge huge congratulations to for getting women ocean protectors in the NYT! Evelyn was the answer to my research question 10 years ago, when I was laughed at for asking “do women do ocean conservation better?”

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  9. 15 Nov 2021

    When the speargun fisherman fired at Evelyn across the dark water, she held her ground. She and dozens in Siquijor are an example for conservation projects globally: When women lead, outcomes improve. My latest, for .

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  10. Retweeted

    Salmon are important to every Washingtonian, whether they spend time fishing, eat salmon, rely on salmon for their business or use salmon in their cultural celebrations.

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  11. Retweeted
    16 Sep 2021

    Zealous wolf-hunting laws may backfire, farmers confront a West with less water, the three things threatening Salt Lake City's appeal, salmon's decline ripples, and more h/t

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  12. Retweeted
    3 Sep 2021

    Because of global warming, the heaviest storms can now produce huge amounts of rainfall in a short time.

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  13. Retweeted
    3 Sep 2021

    Temperatures are in the 90s, and the power is out. For a month. on the heat disaster in New Orleans, for

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  14. Retweeted
    3 Sep 2021
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  15. 29 Aug 2021

    “We’re in uncharted territory here.” Record-low steelhead returns trigger emergency fishing closures.

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  16. Retweeted
    25 Aug 2021

    "The impact of this decline ripples along this species’ entire migratory route, from the tourist economies and tribal communities of the inland Northwest to the $2 billion commercial fishing industry in ocean waters as far as Alaska."

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  17. Retweeted
    21 Aug 2021

    With the smallest count of Chinook salmon in a generation, the fish are struggling to survive —- and so is local tourism. Solid reporting by ⁦

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  18. 21 Aug 2021

    In last week, I met fishing guides, Native American fishermen, motel & restaurant owners whose rural livelihoods, cultures are at risk as the region sees the lowest runs of spring Chinook salmon in a generation - in part thx to change.

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  19. Retweeted
    19 Aug 2021

    In another sign of end times, rain has fallen at the summit of the Greenland ice sheet for the same time. By

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  20. 19 Aug 2021

    Extreme seem here to stay. Here's what we know about how change shaped the hotter, longer, deadlier heatwaves spanning the N. hemisphere all summer (including my home near Portland, OR where temps hit 118F in June). My latest for :

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