Abstract

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Coral Reef Conservation Program supports the National Coral Reef Monitoring Program (NCRMP) in the United States Pacific, Atlantic, Caribbean, and Gulf of Mexico. NCRMP conducts standardized observations of biological, climatic, and socioeconomic indicators across American Samoa, Guam, the Main Hawaiian Islands, the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, the Pacific Remote Islands, Florida, the Flower Garden Banks, Puerto Rico, and the United States Virgin Islands. NCRMP provides periodic, national-level assessments of the status of United States coral reef ecosystems and communities connected to them. In 2014, NCRMP partnered with the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science on an unprecedented collaboration between federal and jurisdictional/state agencies, academia, and non-governmental organizations to synthesize NCRMP data into a reporting format designed to be accessible and relevant to the public and policy makers. The process involved multi-year data analyses of key benthic, fish, and climate indicators. In populated jurisdictions, socioeconomic data were integrated to assess public support for management actions, participation in pro-environmental behaviors, and awareness of threats to coral reefs. Jurisdictions were scored using a report-card scale (0–100%) by establishing references for each indicator using best-available historical data or expert opinion where historical data did not exist or were not statistically comparable. Despite overall ecosystem scores of Fair for all combined Atlantic (70%) and Pacific (74%) jurisdictions, the current trend is downward with a majority of United States coral reefs declining and vulnerable to further degradation. Remote, uninhabited reefs had an advantage with respect to reef fish population scores, i.e., Flower Garden Banks (85%) and Pacific Remote Islands (93%), when compared to populated location scores, i.e., Puerto Rico (63%) and Main Hawaiian Islands (66%). All coral reefs are highly impacted by climate change, and climate impacts were more pronounced than expected on remote reefs, i.e., the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (58%). Presenting results in a report-card style facilitates communication to the public and policy makers, and provides a useful mechanism to garner support for management actions such as expanding protected areas; enforcing existing regulations; increasing climate change education; reducing land-based sources of pollution; and other actions to improve the trajectory of coral reef ecosystem conditions.

Highlights

  • Long-term, comprehensive ecological monitoring programs track temporal and spatial changes in a given habitat or ecosystem

  • Benthic scores ranged from Good (American Samoa; Pacific Remote Islands (PRI)) to Impaired (Guam; Main Hawaiian Islands)

  • Data from Pacific and Atlantic coral reef ecosystem monitoring analyzed in these status reports confirm at a national level what numerous studies have shown at more regional and local levels: that the overall condition of most United States coral reefs has declined moderately to considerably relative to reference conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Long-term, comprehensive ecological monitoring programs track temporal and spatial changes in a given habitat or ecosystem. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)’s National Coral Reef Monitoring Program (NCRMP) within the Coral Reef Conservation Program collects data on biological (benthic and fish), climatic, and socioeconomic indicators of coral reef ecosystems in U.S states and territories (NOAA Coral Program, 2021). Since its inception in 2010, NCRMP has largely focused on data collection, data quality assurance, and long-term archival of raw data that are open access These data are a valuable scientific resource, having been broadly used by NOAA, other United States federal agencies, State and Territorial partners, and key stakeholders for a variety of purposes. Due to the myriad of anthropogenic and natural threats facing coral reefs and the urgency with which conservation efforts are needed and into the current decade, it has become increasingly clear that conservation cannot be achieved without an informed and engaged public and policy makers (Bennett and Dearden, 2014; Bennett et al, 2017)

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