Request for Information: National Ocean Biodiversity Strategy, 77369-77371 [2023-24839]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 216 / Thursday, November 9, 2023 / Notices
It is imperative that the meeting be
held on this date to meet the scheduling
availability of key participants.
Patricia Rausch,
Advisory Committee Management Officer,
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration.
the UAG website at: https://
www.nasa.gov/usersadvisorygroup/.
Patricia Rausch,
Advisory Committee Management Officer,
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration.
[FR Doc. 2023–24814 Filed 11–8–23; 8:45 am]
[FR Doc. 2023–24815 Filed 11–8–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7510–13–P
BILLING CODE 7510–13–P
NATIONAL FOUNDATION OF THE
ARTS AND THE HUMANITIES
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
[Notice: (23–113)]
Institute of Museum and Library
Services
National Space Council Users’
Advisory Group; Meeting
48th Meeting of the National Museum
and Library Services Board
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA).
ACTION: Notice of meeting.
AGENCY:
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, NASA
announces a meeting of the National
Space Council Users’ Advisory Group
(UAG).
SUMMARY:
Friday, December 1, 2023, from
11:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m., Eastern Time.
ADDRESSES: Virtual meeting via dial-in
teleconference and WebEx only.
Virtual Access via Internet and
Phone: Access information links for
both virtual video and audio lines will
be posted in advance at the following
UAG website: https://www.nasa.gov/
usersadvisorygroup/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
James Joseph Miller, UAG Designated
Federal Officer and Executive Secretary,
Space Operations Mission Directorate,
NASA Headquarters, Washington, DC
20546, (202) 262–0929 or jj.miller@
nasa.gov.
The agenda for the meeting will
include the following:
• Introduction by UAG Chair, General
Lester Lyles (USAF, Ret.)
• Opening Remarks
• Expert Presentations
• Report from UAG Subcommittee
Chairs:
—Exploration and Discovery
—Economic Development and
Industrial Base
—Climate and Societal Benefits
—Data and Emerging Technology
—STEM Education, Diversity and
Inclusion
—National Security
• Deliberations on Proposed Findings
and Recommendations
• Next Steps
For further information about
membership and a detailed agenda, visit
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
DATES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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Jkt 262001
Institute of Museum and
Library Services (IMLS), National
Foundation of the Arts and the
Humanities (NFAH).
ACTION: Notice of Meeting.
Pursuant to the Federal
Advisory Committee Act, notice is
hereby given that the National Museum
and Library Services Board will meet to
advise the Director of the Institute of
Museum and Library Services (IMLS)
with respect to duties, powers, and
authority of IMLS relating to museum,
library, and information services, as
well as coordination of activities for the
improvement of these services.
DATES: The meeting will be held on
December 13, 2023, from 9 a.m.
Mountain Time until adjourned.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will convene
in a hybrid format. Virtual meeting and
audio conference technology will be
used to connect virtual attendees with
in-person attendees. Instructions for
joining will be sent to all registrants. Inperson attendees will meet in the
Phoenix Metropolitan Area at a to-beannounced location. Due to roomcapacity limitations, members of the
public who wish to join in-person must
inform IMLS by November 27, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Katherine Maas, Chief of Staff and
Alternate Designated Federal Officer,
Institute of Museum and Library
Services, Suite 4000, 955 L’Enfant Plaza
North SW, Washington, DC 20024; (202)
653–4798; kmaas@imls.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
National Museum and Library Services
Board is meeting pursuant to the
National Museum and Library Service
Act, 20 U.S.C. 9105a, and the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (FACA), as
amended, 5 U.S.C. App.
The 48th Meeting of the National
Museum and Library Services Board,
which is open to the public, will
SUMMARY:
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convene at 9 a.m. Mountain Standard
Time on December 13, 2023.
The agenda for the 48th Meeting of
the National Museum and Library
Services Board will be as follows:
I. Call to Order
II. Approval of Minutes of the 47th
Meeting
III. Director’s Welcome and Update
IV. Board Program—Guest Speaker
V. Tribal Engagement
VI. Literacy Convening and Future
Planning
VII. Information Literacy Initiative
If you wish to attend the meeting,
please inform IMLS as soon as possible,
but no later than close of business on
December 6, 2023, by contacting
Katherine Maas at kmaas@imls.gov. Due
to room-capacity limitations, members
of the public who wish to join in-person
must inform IMLS of this intention by
November 27, 2023. Virtual meeting
information will be sent to all public
registrants. Please provide notice of any
special needs or accommodations by
November 27, 2023.
Dated: November 4, 2023.
Brianna Ingram,
Paralegal Specialist.
[FR Doc. 2023–24775 Filed 11–8–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7036–01–P
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Request for Information: National
Ocean Biodiversity Strategy
National Science Foundation.
Notice of request for
information.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The National Science
Foundation, on behalf of the National
Science and Technology Council
Subcommittee on Ocean Science and
Technology (SOST), requests input from
all interested parties to inform the
development of a National Ocean
Biodiversity Strategy (Strategy),
covering the genetic lineages, species,
habitats, and ecosystems of United
States (U.S.) ocean, coastal, and Great
Lakes waters. The Strategy will
strengthen the knowledge foundation
and coordination on which federal
agencies and other parties can align
priorities and investments toward more
cost-effective and successful solutions
to the increasing challenges that require
information on biodiversity and living
resources. The Strategy will align
research and monitoring on ocean life
for safe and sustainable management,
conservation, development, and climate
solutions; and improve delivery of
biodiversity information to support wise
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\09NON1.SGM
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ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
77370
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 216 / Thursday, November 9, 2023 / Notices
management and the growing ocean
economy. Through this request for
information (RFI), SOST seeks input on
the foundational elements of a Strategy
for delivering needed knowledge and
implementing effective stewardship of
ocean life. Those elements will include
actions federal agencies should take to
collect, coordinate, and deliver
information for policy, investment,
development, and management, to
better align ocean biodiversity
investments and policy with societal
needs for both use and protection of
living resources, ensuring benefits to
society across sectors and from local to
international levels.
DATES: Responses are due by 11:59 p.m.
eastern time on February 28, 2024.
Responses received after this deadline
may not be taken into consideration.
ADDRESSES: Interested individuals and
organizations should submit comments
electronically to rfi-marinebiodiversity@
nsf.gov and include ‘‘RFI: Public
Comment on the National Ocean
Biodiversity Strategy’’ in the subject line
of the message. Submissions should be
machine readable in PDF or Word
format and should not be locked or
password protected. All submissions
must be in English.
Instructions: Response to this RFI is
voluntary. Each individual or
organization is requested to submit only
one response. Commenters can respond
to one or many of the questions
described below. Submissions are
suggested to not exceed the equivalent
of five (5) pages in 12 point or larger
font. Submissions should clearly
indicate which questions are being
addressed. Responses should include
the name of the person(s) or
organization(s) filing the response.
Responses containing references,
studies, research, and other empirical
data that are not widely published
should include copies of or electronic
links to the referenced materials.
Responses containing profanity,
vulgarity, threats, or other inappropriate
language or content will not be
considered.
SOST agencies may post responses to
the RFI, without change, on their
websites and may use the information
received as they see fit. NSF therefore
requests that no business proprietary
information, copyrighted information,
or personally identifiable information be
submitted in response to the RFI. The
U.S. Government will not pay for the
responsible preparation or for the use of
any information contained in the
response.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information, please contact
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18:22 Nov 08, 2023
Jkt 262001
Gabrielle Canonico, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration,
gabrielle.canonico@noaa.gov,
telephone: (240) 533–9452, and/or
Emmett Duffy, Smithsonian Institution,
DuffyE@si.edu.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
People are an integral part of nature
and vice versa. Even in the continental
heartland, our lives, livelihoods, health,
and identities depend on the ocean’s
biodiversity, meaning the variety of life
in all its aspects—species, genetic
lineages, habitats, and associated
ecosystems and interactions—from the
sea surface to the deep ocean, the coasts,
and the Great Lakes, and from microbes
to whales. These living resources
provide our food, clean air and water, a
favorable climate, recreational and
cultural benefits, and critical resources
and economic opportunities. Indeed the
U.S. ocean economy supports 2.4
million jobs across multiple sectors
including fishing, tourism, shipping,
and energy generation, which
contributed $397 billion to the U.S.
gross domestic product in 2019. Much
of that economic engine is driven by
living organisms.
Our natural heritage, and the ways of
life that it supports, are in crisis. A
comprehensive analysis reports that
around 1 million species worldwide
face extinction, many within decades,
unless aggressive action is taken to
reduce drivers of biodiversity loss in the
near future. The biodiversity crisis is
closely intertwined with the ongoing
crises of climate change and inequity
among people, and it is increasingly
clear that these challenges must be
approached together to reach lasting,
just solutions that support human
health, economies, national security,
and other domestic and global
challenges. To address them we need
biological intelligence: trusted,
accessible, and scientifically rigorous
inventories and knowledge of ocean
species and habitats, their interactions,
and the ecosystem functions and
services to people that they support.
That knowledge will come from longterm monitoring of biodiversity and
associated environmental drivers and
conditions, strategically located across
the nation’s expansive marine territory.
These activities are critical to the ability
of managers, rights holders, and
resource users to make decisions that
effectively steward uses of the ocean,
track change in its vital signs, design
effective climate solutions, and grow the
ocean economy. But we are far from that
goal. Information on ocean life and
ecosystems is currently collected by
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many parties using a wide range of
methods; the data are heterogeneous,
generally not coordinated, and often not
shared. Resulting information products
are routinely created without engaging
users ‘on the ground’ and with poor
understanding of their needs for
actionable information. This lack of
coordination and interoperability wastes
limited resources and harms our ability
to effectively sustain multiple uses of a
healthy ocean. As a result, relevant
information about many aspects of
ocean life and ecosystem services is
unavailable or inaccessible.
The Strategy will address these
challenges by facilitating, streamlining,
and coordinating the delivery of
knowledge on ocean life and ecosystems
to develop ocean spaces sustainably,
including advancing conservation plans
and decision processes jointly by codesign with resource users and rightsholders. It will advance capacity to
forecast changes in ocean life and the
ecosystem services it provides by
ensuring that data are comparable and
shared across sectors (government, nongovernmental organizations, private,
academic) and regions (subnational,
national, international), much as
weather data are shared across
international meteorological
organizations to enable nowcasts and
accurate forecasts that are widely used
on a daily basis.
Scoping and Developing a National
Ocean Biodiversity Strategy
The SOST is developing this Strategy
because the linked climate, biodiversity,
and equity crises have created an urgent
need for biological information that can
enable coordinated responses and
solutions. Equally important, leveraging
the exponentially growing quantity and
variety of ocean biodiversity
information for human well-being
requires integration with
biogeochemistry, physics, geology, and
social and economic data to locate both
people and the rest of nature in
integrated knowledge systems that
support effective, just, and sustainable
development and conservation.
The U.S. has one of the largest
exclusive economic zones in the world,
with a comparable wealth of
biodiversity and living resources.
Collecting and delivering the necessary
biodiversity knowledge at this national
scale is an ambitious goal that requires
rapid, large-scale, cross-sectoral
advances in facilitating integration of
communities, sectors, and information
types. It must engage all Americans,
including Tribal Nations, Indigenous
communities, and local communities.
Delivery of information needs to be in
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ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 216 / Thursday, November 9, 2023 / Notices
forms tailored to decision contexts,
informed by and readily understandable
by those interested in using the
information.
Rapidly advancing technology is one
road to reaching that ambition.
Emerging technologies now enable
biomolecular classification of
organisms, tracking of animal migration
and behavior through tagging, acoustics,
imaging, and remote sensing across
previously impossible scales of
geography and time. The resulting
timely, accessible, and accurate
information on ocean life is
fundamental for our social and
economic security at all levels of
governance. It is also fundamental to
maintain international leadership as
needs for food, water, and other
resources continue to grow.
Achieving these goals requires better
coordinating data and information
sharing and resulting actions among
federal agencies, states, tribal
communities, academic, and private
sector initiatives. The Strategy aims to
provide the critical science, data, and
knowledge essential to guide long-term
conservation based on best evidence,
and to make it more accessible to
support a collaborative and inclusive
approach. The Strategy will identify
information users and engage with them
to understand what information they
find useful, and in what forms. The
Strategy will support consistent and
reliable assembly and management of
ocean biodiversity data that is
necessary, but currently lacking, for
ongoing federal activities, such as the
first National Nature Assessment,
Natural Capital Accounting efforts, the
National Strategy for a Sustainable
Ocean Economy, advancing NatureBased Solutions, development of a
National eDNA Strategy, and the Ocean
Climate Action Plan, consistent with
FAIR and CARE principles.
Developing and implementing the
National Ocean Biodiversity Strategy
will advance more cost-effective,
strategic, nimble, and equitable
management of the nation’s living
marine resources and cultural heritage.
Importantly, the Strategy will support
solutions to the intertwined equity crisis
by engaging and supporting Indigenous
Knowledge and prioritizing cross-sector
user needs from local to national levels.
The Strategy also seeks to strengthen
and increase visibility of U.S. leadership
in global initiatives focused on solutions
to the climate and biodiversity crises.
Specifically, the High Level Panel for a
Sustainable Ocean Economy
acknowledged the pressing need for
national contributions to a globally
coordinated effort to collect information
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18:22 Nov 08, 2023
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on ocean biodiversity and on extinction
risk, and highlighted the need to
support long-term biodiversity
monitoring. Similarly, U.S. leadership
of a number of programs and activities
within the UN Decade of Ocean Science
for Sustainable Development supports
emerging communities of practice and
the development of harmonized,
standards-based approaches to address
this need directly.
Themes and Questions To Inform the
Development of the Strategy
Respondents may provide information
for one or as many topics below as they
choose. Submissions should clearly
indicate which questions are being
addressed. The Strategy will be
developed by an interagency working
group under SOST that is co-led by the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration,
and the Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management, in partnership with the
Smithsonian Institution and other
federal agencies. The working group
seeks input from Tribal Nations, local,
State, federal and Territorial
governments, the private sector,
academia, non-governmental
organizations, a wide range of
stakeholders, and the public on highlevel goals and how to achieve them in
the following areas:
Coordination and Priority Setting
• What are the most pressing topics
and considerations for the National
Ocean Biodiversity Strategy to address?
• What actions can federal agencies
take to facilitate the harmonization of
ocean biodiversity investments and
policy to ensure benefits across all
sectors?
Science, Technology, and Information
• What are the priority needs and
most promising approaches in science
and technology to provide useful
information on ocean biodiversity
(species, genetic lineages, habitats,
ecosystems) and the ecosystem
processes and services they support?
• How can we best align the efforts of
knowledge holders with the needs of
knowledge users?
• How can ocean biodiversity data be
made more usable and available? Which
existing mechanisms or repositories
could be leveraged?
Capacity Building and Community
Engagement
• How could public and private
partnerships be developed or enhanced
to explore and characterize ocean life,
which existing partnerships could be
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77371
leveraged, and how might opportunities
for participation by diverse parties in
such partnerships be maximized?
• What are the key needs for training
and education to improve broad
knowledge and stewardship of ocean
life?
• How could the public be engaged in
developing and implementing improved
understanding and stewardship of ocean
life?
• Is there anything else you would
like to be considered in the
development of the National Ocean
Biodiversity Strategy?
Dated: November 6, 2023.
Suzanne H. Plimpton,
Reports Clearance Officer, National Science
Foundation.
[FR Doc. 2023–24839 Filed 11–8–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7555–01–P
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Advisory Committee for Computer and
Information Science and Engineering;
Notice of Meeting
In accordance with the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (Pub. L. 92–
463, as amended), the National Science
Foundation (NSF) announces the
following meeting:
Name and Committee Code: Advisory
Committee for Computer and
Information Science and Engineering
(#1115) (Hybrid).
Date and Time: December 6, 2023;
9:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m. (Eastern); December
7, 2023; 9:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. (Eastern).
Place: NSF, 2415 Eisenhower Avenue,
Room E3450, Alexandria, VA 22314
(Hybrid).
To register for in-person attendance or
for virtual meeting attendees to receive
the Zoom link, please send your request
to the following email: cmessam@
nsf.gov.
Type of Meeting: Open.
Contact Persons: Chantoye Messam,
National Science Foundation, 2415
Eisenhower Avenue, Alexandria, VA
22314; Telephone:703–292–8900; email:
cmessam@nsf.gov.
Purpose of Meeting: To provide
advice, recommendations, and counsel
on major goals and policies pertaining
to Computer and Information Science
and Engineering programs and
activities.
Agenda
• NSF and CISE update
• Report out from the Committee of
Visitors for Computing and
Communication Foundations,
Computer and Network Systems, and
Information and Intelligent Systems
Divisions
E:\FR\FM\09NON1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 216 (Thursday, November 9, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 77369-77371]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-24839]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Request for Information: National Ocean Biodiversity Strategy
AGENCY: National Science Foundation.
ACTION: Notice of request for information.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Science Foundation, on behalf of the National
Science and Technology Council Subcommittee on Ocean Science and
Technology (SOST), requests input from all interested parties to inform
the development of a National Ocean Biodiversity Strategy (Strategy),
covering the genetic lineages, species, habitats, and ecosystems of
United States (U.S.) ocean, coastal, and Great Lakes waters. The
Strategy will strengthen the knowledge foundation and coordination on
which federal agencies and other parties can align priorities and
investments toward more cost-effective and successful solutions to the
increasing challenges that require information on biodiversity and
living resources. The Strategy will align research and monitoring on
ocean life for safe and sustainable management, conservation,
development, and climate solutions; and improve delivery of
biodiversity information to support wise
[[Page 77370]]
management and the growing ocean economy. Through this request for
information (RFI), SOST seeks input on the foundational elements of a
Strategy for delivering needed knowledge and implementing effective
stewardship of ocean life. Those elements will include actions federal
agencies should take to collect, coordinate, and deliver information
for policy, investment, development, and management, to better align
ocean biodiversity investments and policy with societal needs for both
use and protection of living resources, ensuring benefits to society
across sectors and from local to international levels.
DATES: Responses are due by 11:59 p.m. eastern time on February 28,
2024. Responses received after this deadline may not be taken into
consideration.
ADDRESSES: Interested individuals and organizations should submit
comments electronically to [email protected] and include
``RFI: Public Comment on the National Ocean Biodiversity Strategy'' in
the subject line of the message. Submissions should be machine readable
in PDF or Word format and should not be locked or password protected.
All submissions must be in English.
Instructions: Response to this RFI is voluntary. Each individual or
organization is requested to submit only one response. Commenters can
respond to one or many of the questions described below. Submissions
are suggested to not exceed the equivalent of five (5) pages in 12
point or larger font. Submissions should clearly indicate which
questions are being addressed. Responses should include the name of the
person(s) or organization(s) filing the response. Responses containing
references, studies, research, and other empirical data that are not
widely published should include copies of or electronic links to the
referenced materials. Responses containing profanity, vulgarity,
threats, or other inappropriate language or content will not be
considered.
SOST agencies may post responses to the RFI, without change, on
their websites and may use the information received as they see fit.
NSF therefore requests that no business proprietary information,
copyrighted information, or personally identifiable information be
submitted in response to the RFI. The U.S. Government will not pay for
the responsible preparation or for the use of any information contained
in the response.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information, please
contact Gabrielle Canonico, National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, [email protected], telephone: (240) 533-9452,
and/or Emmett Duffy, Smithsonian Institution, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
People are an integral part of nature and vice versa. Even in the
continental heartland, our lives, livelihoods, health, and identities
depend on the ocean's biodiversity, meaning the variety of life in all
its aspects--species, genetic lineages, habitats, and associated
ecosystems and interactions--from the sea surface to the deep ocean,
the coasts, and the Great Lakes, and from microbes to whales. These
living resources provide our food, clean air and water, a favorable
climate, recreational and cultural benefits, and critical resources and
economic opportunities. Indeed the U.S. ocean economy supports 2.4
million jobs across multiple sectors including fishing, tourism,
shipping, and energy generation, which contributed $397 billion to the
U.S. gross domestic product in 2019. Much of that economic engine is
driven by living organisms.
Our natural heritage, and the ways of life that it supports, are in
crisis. A comprehensive analysis reports that around 1 million species
worldwide face extinction, many within decades, unless aggressive
action is taken to reduce drivers of biodiversity loss in the near
future. The biodiversity crisis is closely intertwined with the ongoing
crises of climate change and inequity among people, and it is
increasingly clear that these challenges must be approached together to
reach lasting, just solutions that support human health, economies,
national security, and other domestic and global challenges. To address
them we need biological intelligence: trusted, accessible, and
scientifically rigorous inventories and knowledge of ocean species and
habitats, their interactions, and the ecosystem functions and services
to people that they support.
That knowledge will come from long-term monitoring of biodiversity
and associated environmental drivers and conditions, strategically
located across the nation's expansive marine territory. These
activities are critical to the ability of managers, rights holders, and
resource users to make decisions that effectively steward uses of the
ocean, track change in its vital signs, design effective climate
solutions, and grow the ocean economy. But we are far from that goal.
Information on ocean life and ecosystems is currently collected by many
parties using a wide range of methods; the data are heterogeneous,
generally not coordinated, and often not shared. Resulting information
products are routinely created without engaging users `on the ground'
and with poor understanding of their needs for actionable information.
This lack of coordination and interoperability wastes limited resources
and harms our ability to effectively sustain multiple uses of a healthy
ocean. As a result, relevant information about many aspects of ocean
life and ecosystem services is unavailable or inaccessible.
The Strategy will address these challenges by facilitating,
streamlining, and coordinating the delivery of knowledge on ocean life
and ecosystems to develop ocean spaces sustainably, including advancing
conservation plans and decision processes jointly by co-design with
resource users and rights-holders. It will advance capacity to forecast
changes in ocean life and the ecosystem services it provides by
ensuring that data are comparable and shared across sectors
(government, non-governmental organizations, private, academic) and
regions (subnational, national, international), much as weather data
are shared across international meteorological organizations to enable
nowcasts and accurate forecasts that are widely used on a daily basis.
Scoping and Developing a National Ocean Biodiversity Strategy
The SOST is developing this Strategy because the linked climate,
biodiversity, and equity crises have created an urgent need for
biological information that can enable coordinated responses and
solutions. Equally important, leveraging the exponentially growing
quantity and variety of ocean biodiversity information for human well-
being requires integration with biogeochemistry, physics, geology, and
social and economic data to locate both people and the rest of nature
in integrated knowledge systems that support effective, just, and
sustainable development and conservation.
The U.S. has one of the largest exclusive economic zones in the
world, with a comparable wealth of biodiversity and living resources.
Collecting and delivering the necessary biodiversity knowledge at this
national scale is an ambitious goal that requires rapid, large-scale,
cross-sectoral advances in facilitating integration of communities,
sectors, and information types. It must engage all Americans, including
Tribal Nations, Indigenous communities, and local communities. Delivery
of information needs to be in
[[Page 77371]]
forms tailored to decision contexts, informed by and readily
understandable by those interested in using the information.
Rapidly advancing technology is one road to reaching that ambition.
Emerging technologies now enable biomolecular classification of
organisms, tracking of animal migration and behavior through tagging,
acoustics, imaging, and remote sensing across previously impossible
scales of geography and time. The resulting timely, accessible, and
accurate information on ocean life is fundamental for our social and
economic security at all levels of governance. It is also fundamental
to maintain international leadership as needs for food, water, and
other resources continue to grow.
Achieving these goals requires better coordinating data and
information sharing and resulting actions among federal agencies,
states, tribal communities, academic, and private sector initiatives.
The Strategy aims to provide the critical science, data, and knowledge
essential to guide long-term conservation based on best evidence, and
to make it more accessible to support a collaborative and inclusive
approach. The Strategy will identify information users and engage with
them to understand what information they find useful, and in what
forms. The Strategy will support consistent and reliable assembly and
management of ocean biodiversity data that is necessary, but currently
lacking, for ongoing federal activities, such as the first National
Nature Assessment, Natural Capital Accounting efforts, the National
Strategy for a Sustainable Ocean Economy, advancing Nature-Based
Solutions, development of a National eDNA Strategy, and the Ocean
Climate Action Plan, consistent with FAIR and CARE principles.
Developing and implementing the National Ocean Biodiversity
Strategy will advance more cost-effective, strategic, nimble, and
equitable management of the nation's living marine resources and
cultural heritage. Importantly, the Strategy will support solutions to
the intertwined equity crisis by engaging and supporting Indigenous
Knowledge and prioritizing cross-sector user needs from local to
national levels.
The Strategy also seeks to strengthen and increase visibility of
U.S. leadership in global initiatives focused on solutions to the
climate and biodiversity crises. Specifically, the High Level Panel for
a Sustainable Ocean Economy acknowledged the pressing need for national
contributions to a globally coordinated effort to collect information
on ocean biodiversity and on extinction risk, and highlighted the need
to support long-term biodiversity monitoring. Similarly, U.S.
leadership of a number of programs and activities within the UN Decade
of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development supports emerging
communities of practice and the development of harmonized, standards-
based approaches to address this need directly.
Themes and Questions To Inform the Development of the Strategy
Respondents may provide information for one or as many topics below
as they choose. Submissions should clearly indicate which questions are
being addressed. The Strategy will be developed by an interagency
working group under SOST that is co-led by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, in
partnership with the Smithsonian Institution and other federal
agencies. The working group seeks input from Tribal Nations, local,
State, federal and Territorial governments, the private sector,
academia, non-governmental organizations, a wide range of stakeholders,
and the public on high-level goals and how to achieve them in the
following areas:
Coordination and Priority Setting
What are the most pressing topics and considerations for
the National Ocean Biodiversity Strategy to address?
What actions can federal agencies take to facilitate the
harmonization of ocean biodiversity investments and policy to ensure
benefits across all sectors?
Science, Technology, and Information
What are the priority needs and most promising approaches
in science and technology to provide useful information on ocean
biodiversity (species, genetic lineages, habitats, ecosystems) and the
ecosystem processes and services they support?
How can we best align the efforts of knowledge holders
with the needs of knowledge users?
How can ocean biodiversity data be made more usable and
available? Which existing mechanisms or repositories could be
leveraged?
Capacity Building and Community Engagement
How could public and private partnerships be developed or
enhanced to explore and characterize ocean life, which existing
partnerships could be leveraged, and how might opportunities for
participation by diverse parties in such partnerships be maximized?
What are the key needs for training and education to
improve broad knowledge and stewardship of ocean life?
How could the public be engaged in developing and
implementing improved understanding and stewardship of ocean life?
Is there anything else you would like to be considered in
the development of the National Ocean Biodiversity Strategy?
Dated: November 6, 2023.
Suzanne H. Plimpton,
Reports Clearance Officer, National Science Foundation.
[FR Doc. 2023-24839 Filed 11-8-23; 8:45 am]
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