Title 16 › Chapter 31— MARINE MAMMAL PROTECTION › Subchapter II— CONSERVATION AND PROTECTION OF MARINE MAMMALS › § 1387
Require U.S. commercial fishing vessels, and foreign vessels with a valid U.S. fishing permit, to cut down accidental deaths and serious injuries of marine mammals. The law took effect April 30, 1994, and sets an overall goal to get accidental deaths and serious injuries to “insignificant levels approaching a zero” within 7 years after that date. Intentional killing of marine mammals during commercial fishing is banned except where another part of the law allows it. The rule does not cover California sea otters and certain tuna purse-seine fishing in the eastern tropical Pacific, which are handled by other laws. Put fisheries into categories (frequent, occasional, or remote interactions) and publish the list with at least 90 days for public comment, then update it yearly as needed. Owners of vessels in frequent or occasional categories must register with the Secretary using a standard form (owner, vessel, fishery, times, location, gear), get an authorization and a decal that is renewed each year, carry observers if asked, and report any accidental marine mammal deaths or injuries on a standard form within 48 hours after each trip (giving vessel ID, owner, fishery, species, date/time/location). The Secretary will run monitoring with observers, give priority to endangered or threatened stocks, and may use alternative observation methods. For marine mammal stocks that need action, the Secretary must create take-reduction plans with teams of experts. Plans must aim to cut serious injury and death below a set biological limit within 6 months and to near zero within 5 years, with faster schedules for stocks with high mortality (teams must draft plans in 6 months or 11 months depending on the case). The Secretary can issue emergency rules (up to 180 days, plus a 90-day extension) to stop immediate harm. Violations can bring penalties. The Secretary must coordinate with states, councils, and the Interior Department, may charge fees to cover costs, and may accept gifts to help carry out the program. “Fishery” and “vessel of the United States” are defined in another part of the law.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 1387
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60