Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 38— - FISHERY CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - FISHERY MONITORING AND RESEARCH › § 1882
Create an advisory panel within 180 days after October 11, 1996, to make recommendations on using ecosystem principles in fishery conservation and management. The panel must have no more than 20 people, including ecosystem scientists and representatives from the Councils, States, the fishing industry, conservation groups, or others with marine resource management experience. Before picking the ecosystem experts, the Secretary must ask the National Academy of Sciences for recommendations. Within 2 years after October 11, 1996, the Secretary must send Congress a report that analyzes how ecosystem ideas are being used, lists actions the Secretary and Congress should take to expand their use, and includes other relevant information. The panel counts as an advisory panel under section 1852(g). Within 180 days after January 12, 2007, the Secretary, with the Councils, must finish a study on the science for adding ecosystem considerations to regional fishery management. The study must build on the panel’s work and include recommendations on scientific data, technology, and ways to combine information from federal, state, and regional sources; ways to get broad stakeholder input; ways to account for environmental effects on fish stocks; and a description of council efforts and lessons learned. The Secretary may provide technical help and grants to the Councils to design regional pilot programs based on the panel’s recommendations and the study.
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Citation
16 U.S.C. § 1882
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73