Title 16ConservationRelease 119-73

§1421a Determination; data collection and dissemination

Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 31— - MARINE MAMMAL PROTECTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - MARINE MAMMAL HEALTH AND STRANDING RESPONSE › § 1421a

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

The Secretary must create clear, objective rules for deciding when a rescued and treated marine mammal is ready to go back to the wild. To do that, the Secretary will work with the Interior Department, the Marine Mammal Commission, and experts in marine science, veterinary care, animal care, and conservation, and allow public review and comment. The Secretary must also collect and update information on rescue and rehab methods (including species-specific release criteria), how to collect and handle tissue samples, scientific literature on marine mammal health, records of strandings and entanglements (including unusual mortality events) by region, and other life history and tissue data. After each stranding or entanglement response, the Secretary will gather data from NOAA staff and require anyone who helped respond to send reports and samples. Required items include official event reports or similar forms, supplemental details as available (for example weather, nearby human or predator activity, body measurements, behavior, health checks, life-history samples, stomach contents), and lab results (for example histology, toxicology, microbiology, virology, parasitology). Basic reports must be submitted within 30 days of the response, supplemental data within 30 days of availability, and lab results within 30 days of the lab report. An online system will be set up for submissions. The Secretary must make data available to researchers, responders, and the public to improve response coordination, public health alerts, research, publications, a national archive, and education. Data from NOAA or Fish and Wildlife staff must be posted on Health MAP and the Observation System within 30 days. Data from other responders must be posted there 2 years after submission unless the responder allows earlier release in writing or a law enforcement or legal action requires keeping it private longer. The Secretary must publish and update data standards, make a data management and outreach policy with regional networks, include rules for authorship or credit, and may not require any research data beyond what is listed above.

Full Legal Text

Title 16, §1421a

Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The Secretary shall, in consultation with the Secretary of the Interior, the Marine Mammal Commission, and individuals with knowledge and experience in marine science, marine mammal science, marine mammal veterinary and husbandry practices, and marine conservation, including stranding network participants, develop objective criteria, after an opportunity for public review and comment, to provide guidance for determining at what point a rehabilitated marine mammal is releasable to the wild.
(b)The Secretary shall, in consultation with the Secretary of the Interior, collect and update, periodically, existing information on—
(1)procedures and practices for—
(A)rescuing and rehabilitating stranded or entangled marine mammals, including criteria used by stranding network participants, on a species-by-species basis, for determining at what point a marine mammal undergoing rescue and rehabilitation is returnable to the wild; and
(B)collecting, preserving, labeling, and transporting marine mammal tissues for physical, chemical, and biological analyses;
(2)appropriate scientific literature on marine mammal health, disease, and rehabilitation;
(3)strandings and entanglements, including unusual mortality events, which the Secretary shall compile and analyze, by stranding region, to monitor species, numbers, conditions, and causes of illnesses and deaths of stranded marine mammals and entangled marine mammals to allow comparison of the causes of illness and deaths in stranded marine mammals and entangled marine mammals with physical, chemical, and biological environmental parameters; and
(4)other life history and reference level data, including marine mammal tissue analyses.
(c)(1)After each response to a stranding or entanglement event, the Secretary shall collect (including from any staff of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration that respond directly to such an event), and shall require each stranding network participant who responds to that stranding or entanglement to submit to the Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration or the Director of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service—
(A)data on the stranding event, including NOAA Form 89–864 (OMB #0648–0178), NOAA Form 89–878 (OMB #0648–0178), similar successor forms, or similar information in an appropriate format required by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service for species under its management authority;
(B)supplemental data to the data described in subparagraph (A), which may include, as available, relevant information about—
(i)weather and tide conditions;
(ii)offshore human, predator, or prey activity;
(iii)morphometrics;
(iv)behavior;
(v)health assessments;
(vi)life history samples; or
(vii)stomach and intestinal contents; and
(C)data and results from laboratory analysis of tissues, which may include, as appropriate and available—
(i)histopathology;
(ii)toxicology;
(iii)microbiology;
(iv)virology; or
(v)parasitology.
(2)A stranding network participant shall submit—
(A)the data described in paragraph (1)(A) not later than 30 days after the date of a response to a stranding or entanglement event;
(B)the compiled data described in paragraph (1)(B) not later than 30 days after the date on which the data is available to the stranding network participant; and
(C)the compiled data described in paragraph (1)(C) not later than 30 days after the date on which the laboratory analysis has been reported to the stranding network participant.
(3)The Secretary, acting through the Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere, in consultation with the stranding network and the Office of Evaluation Sciences of the General Services Administration, shall establish an online system for the purposes of efficient and timely submission of data described in paragraph (1).
(d)(1)The Secretary shall develop a program to make information, including any data and metadata collected under paragraph (3) or (4) of subsection (b) or subsection (c), available to researchers, stranding network participants, and the public—
(A)to improve real-time coordination of response to stranding and entanglement events across geographic areas and between stranding coordinators;
(B)to identify and quickly disseminate information on potential public health risks;
(C)to facilitate integrated interdisciplinary research;
(D)to facilitate peer-reviewed publications;
(E)to archive regional data into 1 national database for future analyses; and
(F)for education and outreach activities.
(2)The Secretary shall ensure that any data or metadata collected under subsection (c)—
(A)by staff of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration or the United States Fish and Wildlife Service that responded directly to a stranding or entanglement event is available to the public through the Health MAP and the Observation System not later than 30 days after that data or metadata is collected by, available to, or reported to the Secretary; and
(B)by a stranding network participant that responded directly to a stranding or entanglement event is made available to the public through the Health MAP and the Observation System 2 years after the date on which that data are submitted to the Secretary under subsection (c).
(3)(A)Notwithstanding paragraph (2)(B), the Secretary may make data described in paragraph (2)(B) publicly available earlier than 2 years after the date on which that data are submitted to the Secretary under subsection (c), if the stranding network participant has completed a written release stating that such data may be made publicly available.
(B)Notwithstanding paragraph (2), the Secretary may withhold data for a longer period than the period of time described in paragraph (2) in the event of a law enforcement action or legal action that may be related to that data.
(e)The Secretary, in consultation with the marine mammal stranding community, shall—
(1)make publicly available guidance about uniform data and metadata standards to ensure that data collected in accordance with this section can be archived in a form that is readily accessible and understandable to the public through the Health MAP and the Observation System; and
(2)periodically update such guidance.
(f)In collaboration with the regional stranding networks, the Secretary shall develop, and periodically update, a data management and public outreach collaboration policy for stranding or entanglement events.
(g)The Secretary, acting through the Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere, shall include authorship agreements or other acknowledgment considerations for use of data by the public, as determined by the Secretary.
(h)The Secretary shall not require submission of research data that are not described in subsection (c).

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Amendments

2022—Subsec. (b)(1)(A). Pub. L. 117–263, § 10401(1)(A), inserted “or entangled” after “stranded”. Subsec. (b)(3). Pub. L. 117–263, § 10401(1)(B), substituted “strandings and entanglements, including unusual mortality events, which the Secretary shall compile and analyze, by stranding region, to monitor species, numbers, conditions, and causes of illnesses and deaths of stranded marine mammals and entangled marine mammals to allow comparison of the causes of illness and deaths in stranded marine mammals and entangled marine mammals with physical, chemical, and biological environmental parameters; and” for “strandings, which the Secretary shall compile and analyze, by region, to monitor species, numbers, conditions, and causes of illnesses and deaths of stranded marine mammals; and”. Subsec. (b)(4). Pub. L. 117–263, § 10401(1)(C), substituted “analyses.” for “analyses, that would allow comparison of the causes of illness and deaths in stranded marine mammals with physical, chemical, and biological environmental parameters.” Subsecs. (c) to (h). Pub. L. 117–263, § 10401(2), added subsecs. (c) to (h) and struck out former subsec. (c). Prior to amendment, text of subsec. (c) read as follows: “The Secretary shall make information collected under this section available to stranding network participants and other qualified scientists.”

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Implementation Pub. L. 102–587, title III, § 3003(b), Nov. 4, 1992, 106 Stat. 5066, provided that: “The Secretary of Commerce shall— “(1) in accordance with section 302(a) and (b) [now 402(a), (b)] of the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 [16 U.S.C. 1421a(a), (b)], as amended by this Act, and not later than 24 months after the date of enactment of this Act [Nov. 4, 1992]—“(A) develop and implement objective criteria to determine at what point a marine mammal undergoing rehabilitation is returnable to the wild; and “(B) collect and make available information on marine mammal health and health trends; and “(2) in accordance with section 304(b) [now 404(b)] of the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 [16 U.S.C. 1421c(b)], as amended by this Act, issue a detailed contingency plan for responding to any unusual mortality event—“(A) in proposed form by not later than 18 months after the date of enactment of this Act; and “(B) in final form by not later than 24 months after the date of enactment of this Act.”

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

16 U.S.C. § 1421a

Title 16Conservation

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73