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1315 East West Highway
Silver Spring MD 20910
301-713-1671
http://www.oar.noaa.gov
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Exploring and investigating ocean
habitats and resources
Overview
The earth is the only known living planet, and its life is derived largely
from its oceans. Over a hundred years of oceanographic research shows
that the oceans play a critical role in regulating weather and climate,
host extraordinarily diverse life forms, and provide significant biological
and mineral resources. It is NOAA's responsibility to manage U.S. territorial
waters to insure environmental and ecosystem health, economic stability
and growth, and human health and safety. NOAA Research scientists work
with managers in all these areas to provide the information needed to
accomplish these objectives.
NOAA's research laboratories, National Sea Grant College
Program, National Undersea Research Program, and research partners study
a very wide range of topics related to the oceans and U.S. Great Lakes.
These include coastal hazards, ocean circulation, pollution, invasive
species, fisheries and aquaculture, and ocean products. In all, the ultimate
objective is to improve or at least maintain ecosystem health while improving
human quality of life.
NOAA Research is working towards accurate prediction of
the effects of natural and man-made environmental change in order to eliminate
or reduce them.
Key Issues for the United States
A variety of hazards regularly threaten the nation's coastal inhabitants.
Severe meteorological events such as hurricanes, tropical cyclones and
northeasters often bring high winds, storm surges, flooding and shoreline
erosion that are particularly damaging to coastal areas.
Although natural hazards have occurred throughout history,
their recent impacts have been increasingly devastating. Estimated disaster
losses in the United States range from $10 billion to $50 billion annually,
with an average cost from a single major disaster around $500 million.
One of the primary factors contributing to the rise in disaster losses
is the steady increase in the population of high-risk areas, such as coastal
areas.
In addition to the threats to the U.S. coastline, the general
welfare of the Nation's living marine resources is at risk. The decline
in Northeast groundfish, the precarious state of some West Coast salmon
runs, and the reduced populations of sharks and other marine species are
just a few of the areas that require special attention.
Although many of our living resources remain healthy, the
pressures and demands placed on them will continue to increase. The challenge
is to maintain the long-term viability of the natural system, while at
the same time addressing the social and economic needs of the fisheries.
For example, NOAA recognizes that a stronger U.S. aquaculture industry
can significantly increase domestic fisheries supplies, and work to hold
in check or decrease the U.S. seafood deficit, which reached nearly $7
billion in 1998.
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Impacts on Public Safety
Oceanic processes and events can have significant consequences
for public safety, although the scales of the events are quite different.
NOAA predicts tsunamis, floods, coastal erosion, significant sea level
changes and storm surges. In addition, NOAA weather and oceanographic
information has specific consequences and application to boating and marine
safety (including marine accidents). In all of these, NOAA Research provides
the means to improve predictions and reduce the human effects of natural
events.
Impacts on the Economy
American aquatic living resources are sources not only of food,
but also for recreation and improved quality of life. NOAA Research acts
to reduce overfishing by helping improve population estimates, studying
the causes and consequences of habitat destruction (hypoxia, anoxia, wetlands
destruction, damage by fishing gear), and by promoting and developing
aquaculture to replace lost natural populations and satisfy demand without
damaging wild stocks. It also helps maintain natural biodiversity and
minimize invasive species and their effects. Through studies of extremophiles,
NOAA Research also plays a crucial role in the development of industrial
biotechnology and ocean engineering. Finally, through educational and
informational programs, NOAA research promotes responsible use of aquatic
resources, growth of coastal economies, and an informed citizenry.
Impacts On Public Health
Effects of water quality on environmental health and its consequences
to public health can be significant, and on occasion, life threatening.
Increased nutrients from human activities can result in extraordinary
abundances of a wide variety of harmful algal blooms, red tides, and other
microorganisms such as Pfiesteria. Blooms of some aquatic organisms can
produce toxins virulent enough to kill humans who eat organisms in which
the toxins are concentrated, such as mussels and oysters. Non-nutrient
chemical pollution and its effects is also a serious problem for all living
organisms exposed to the polluted waters. NOAA Research works closely
with other federal, state, and local agencies to determine the sources,
amounts, and effects of these contaminants.
What NOAA Research Can Do
- Provide information leading to restoring depleted populations of exploited
and protected species;
- Reduce coastal hazards from contaminated water, harmful algal blooms,
coastal erosion, and marine accidents;
- Develop and promote sustainable marine aquaculture;
- Provide integrated scientific information to support informed decisions
regarding land use, water resource management, fisheries management,
and ecosystem health;
- Better characterize and understand the role of the oceans in weather
and climate predictions;
- Develop and provide essential understanding of the physical, chemical,
and biological aspects of the oceans and Great Lakes in support of comprehensive
ecosystem management;
- Foster public ability to understand and ind integrate scientific information
in finding solutions to environmental issues; and
- Increase long-term commitment to research by recruiting the best scientists,
increasing funding, streamlining processes, and modernizing systems.
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