Title 16ConservationRelease 119-73

§1421f–2 Marine Mammal Health Monitoring and Analysis Platform (Health MAP)

Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 31— - MARINE MAMMAL PROTECTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - MARINE MAMMAL HEALTH AND STRANDING RESPONSE › § 1421f–2

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Within 1 year after December 23, 2022, the Secretary (through the NOAA Administrator and after talking with the Interior Secretary and the Marine Mammal Commission) must set up a Marine Mammal Health Monitoring and Analysis Platform called Health MAP. Health MAP must be part of the Observation System, available on its website, and able to connect with other national or research data systems when practical. Its main goals are to help experts from many fields work together; share timely data on marine mammal health, strandings, entanglements, and deaths; spot patterns in time and place; measure both fatal and nonfatal health effects; improve teamwork and forecasting of big ecosystem events; quickly share strandings that might affect human health; and give the public easy-to-use visual data. It will also feed into an ocean health index. Health MAP must combine field, remote, and other data from stranding networks, governments, private partners, and schools, including visual displays and metadata. It must be built to make data easy to share and access across regions, disciplines, and the public, with input from States and stranding partners. The Secretary must write rules for reporting, quickly sending, sharing, and adding relevant data. NOAA’s Administrator will keep Health MAP updated with help from the Interior Department and the Marine Mammal Commission. The Secretary may accept gifts or bequests; money received will go into Commerce accounts and can only be spent as Congress approves in appropriations laws.

Full Legal Text

Title 16, §1421f–2

Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)Not later than 1 year after December 23, 2022, the Secretary, acting through the Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, in consultation with the Secretary of the Interior and the Marine Mammal Commission, shall—
(1)establish a marine mammal health monitoring and analysis platform (referred to in this chapter as the “Health MAP”);
(2)incorporate the Health MAP into the Observation System; and
(3)make the Health MAP—
(A)publicly accessible through the web portal of the Observation System; and
(B)interoperable with other national data systems or other data systems for management or research purposes, as practicable.
(b)The purposes of the Health MAP are—
(1)to promote—
(A)interdisciplinary research among individuals with knowledge and experience in marine mammal science, marine mammal veterinary and husbandry practices, medical science, and oceanography, and with other marine scientists;
(B)timely and sustained dissemination and availability of marine mammal health, stranding, entanglement, and mortality data;
(C)identification of spatial and temporal patterns of marine mammal mortality, disease, and stranding;
(D)evaluation of marine mammal health in terms of mortality, as well as sublethal marine mammal health impacts;
(E)improved collaboration and forecasting of marine mammal and larger ecosystem health events;
(F)rapid communication and dissemination of information regarding marine mammal strandings that may have implications for human health, such as those caused by harmful algal blooms; and
(G)increased accessibility of data in a user friendly visual interface for public education and outreach; and
(2)to contribute to an ocean health index that incorporates marine mammal health data.
(c)The Health MAP shall—
(1)integrate in situ, remote, and other marine mammal health, stranding, and mortality data, including visualizations and metadata, collected by marine mammal stranding networks, Federal, State, local, and Tribal governments, private partners, and academia; and
(2)be designed—
(A)to enhance data and information availability, including data sharing among stranding network participants, scientists, and the public within and across stranding network regions;
(B)to facilitate data and information access across scientific disciplines, scientists, and managers;
(C)to facilitate public access to national and regional marine mammal health, stranding, entanglement, and mortality data, including visualizations and metadata, through the national and regional data portals of the Observation System; and
(D)in collaboration with, and with input from, States and stranding network participants.
(d)The Secretary shall establish and implement policies, protocols, and standards for—
(1)reporting marine mammal health data collected by stranding networks consistent with subsections (c) and (d) of section 1421a of this title;
(2)promptly transmitting health data from the stranding networks and other appropriate data providers to the Health MAP;
(3)disseminating and making publicly available data on marine mammal health, stranding, entanglement, and mortality data in a timely and sustained manner; and
(4)integrating additional marine mammal health, stranding, or other relevant data as the Secretary determines appropriate.
(e)The Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shall maintain and update the Health MAP in consultation with the Secretary of the Interior and the Marine Mammal Commission.
(f)(1)For the purposes of carrying out this section, the Secretary may solicit, accept, receive, hold, administer, and use gifts, devises, and bequests without any further approval or administrative action.
(2)A monetary gift, devise, or bequest accepted by the Secretary under paragraph (1) shall be credited as discretionary offsetting collections to the currently applicable appropriation, account, or fund of the Department of Commerce and shall be made available for such purposes only to the extent and in the amounts provided in advance in appropriations Acts.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

16 U.S.C. § 1421f–2

Title 16Conservation

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73