[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 15, Volume 3]
[Revised as of January 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 15CFR921.1]

[Page 93-95]
 
                  TITLE 15--COMMERCE AND FOREIGN TRADE
 
CHAPTER IX--NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT 
                               OF COMMERCE
 
PART 921_NATIONAL ESTUARINE RESEARCH RESERVE SYSTEM REGULATIONS--Table of Contents
 
                            Subpart A_General
 
Sec. 921.1  Mission, goals and general provisions.


    (a) The mission of the National Estuarine Research Reserve Program 
is the establishment and management, through Federal-state cooperation, 
of a national system (National Estuarine Research Reserve System or 
System) of estuarine research reserves (National Estuarine Research 
Reserves or Reserves) representative of the various regions and 
estuarine types in the United States. National Estuarine Research 
Reserves are established to provide opportunities for long-term 
research, education, and interpretation.
    (b) The goals of the Program are to:
    (1) Ensure a stable environment for research through long-term 
protection of National Estuarine Research Reserve resources;
    (2) Address coastal management issues identified as significant 
through coordinated estuarine research within the System;

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    (3) Enhance public awareness and understanding of estuarine areas 
and provide suitable opportunities for public education and 
interpretation;
    (4) Promote Federal, state, public and private use of one or more 
Reserves within the System when such entities conduct estuarine 
research; and
    (5) Conduct and coordinate estuarine research within the System, 
gathering and making available information necessary for improved 
understanding and management of estuarine areas.
    (c) National Estuarine Research Reserves shall be open to the public 
to the extent permitted under state and Federal law. Multiple uses are 
allowed to the degree compatible with each Reserve's overall purpose as 
provided in the management plan (see Sec. 921.13) and consistent with 
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section. Use levels are set by the state 
where the Reserve is located and analyzed in the management plan. The 
Reserve management plan shall describe the uses and establish priorities 
among these uses. The plan shall identify uses requiring a state permit, 
as well as areas where uses are encouraged or prohibited. Consistent 
with resource protection and research objectives, public access and use 
may be restricted to certain areas or components within a Reserve.
    (d) Habitat manipulation for research purposes is allowed consistent 
with the following limitations. Manipulative research activities must be 
specified in the management plan, be consistent with the mission and 
goals of the program (see paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section) and 
the goals and objectives set forth in the Reserve's management plan, and 
be limited in nature and extent to the minimum manipulative activity 
necessary to accomplish the stated research objective. Manipulative 
research activities with a significant or long-term impact on Reserve 
resources require the prior approval of the state and the National 
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Manipulative research 
activities which can reasonably be expected to have a significant 
adverse impact on the estuarine resources and habitat of a Reserve, such 
that the activities themselves or their resulting short- and long-term 
consequences compromise the representative character and integrity of a 
Reserve, are prohibited. Habitat manipulation for resource management 
purposes is prohibited except as specifically approved by NOAA as: (1) A 
restoration activity consistent with paragraph (e) of this section; or 
(2) an activity necessary for the protection of public health or the 
preservation of other sensitive resources which have been listed or are 
eligible for protection under relevant Federal or state authority (e.g., 
threatened/endangered species or significant historical or cultural 
resources) or if the manipulative activity is a long-term pre-existing 
use (i.e., has occurred prior to designation) occurring in a buffer 
area. If habitat manipulation is determined to be necessary for the 
protection of public health, the preservation of sensitive resources, or 
if the manipulation is a long-term pre-existing use in a buffer area, 
then these activities shall be specified in the Reserve management plan 
in accordance with Sec. 921.13(a)(10) and shall be limited to the 
reasonable alternative which has the least adverse and shortest term 
impact on the representative and ecological integrity of the Reserve.
    (e) Under the Act an area may be designated as an estuarine Reserve 
only if the area is a representative estuarine ecosystem that is 
suitable for long-term research. Many estuarine areas have undergone 
some ecological change as a result of human activities (e.g., 
hydrological changes, intentional/unintentional species composition 
changes--introduced and exotic species). In those areas proposed or 
designated as National Estuarine Research Reserves, such changes may 
have diminished the representative character and integrity of the site. 
Although restoration of degraded areas is not a primary purpose of the 
System, such activities may be permitted to improve the representative 
character and integrity of a Reserve. Restoration activities must be 
carefully planned and approved by NOAA through the Reserve management 
plan. Historical research may be necessary to determine the ``natural'' 
representative state of an estuarine area (i.e., an estuarine ecosystem 
minimally affected by

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human activity or influence). Frequently, restoration of a degraded 
estuarine area will provide an excellent opportunity for management 
oriented research.
    (f) NOAA may provide financial assistance to coastal states, not to 
exceed, per Reserve, 50 percent of all actual costs or $5 million 
whichever amount is less, to assist in the acquisition of land and 
waters, or interests therein. NOAA may provide financial assistance to 
coastal states not to exceed 70 percent of all actual costs for the 
management and operation of, the development and construction of 
facilities, and the conduct of educational or interpretive activities 
concerning Reserves (see subpart I). NOAA may provide financial 
assistance to any coastal state or public or private person, not to 
exceed 70 percent of all actual costs, to support research and 
monitoring within a Reserve. Notwithstanding any financial assistance 
limits established by this Part, when financial assistance is provided 
from amounts recovered as a result of damage to natural resources 
located in the coastal zone, such assistance may be used to pay 100 
percent of all actual costs of activities carrier out with this 
assistance, as long as such funds are available. Predesignation, 
acquisition and development, operation and management, special research 
and monitoring, and special education and interpretation awards are 
available under the National Estuarine Reserve Program. Predesignation 
awards are for site selection/feasibility, draft management plan 
preparation and conduct of basic characterization studies. Acquisition 
and development awards are intended primarily for acquisition of 
interests in land, facility construction and to develop and/or upgrade 
research, monitoring and education programs. Operation and management 
awards provide funds to assist in implementing, operating and managing 
the administrative, and basic research, monitoring and education 
programs, outlined in the Reserve management plan. Special research and 
monitoring awards provide funds to conduct estuarine research and 
monitoring projects with the System. Special educational and 
interpretive awards provide funds to conduct estuarine educational and 
interpretive projects within the System.
    (g) Lands already in protected status managed by other Federal 
agencies, state or local governments, or private organizations may be 
included within National Estuarine Research Reserves only if the 
managing entity commits to long-term management consistent with 
paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section in the Reserve management plan. 
Federal lands already in protected status may not comprise a majority of 
the key land and water areas of a Reserve (see Sec. 921.11(c)(3)).
    (h) To assist the states in carrying out the Program's goals in an 
effective manner, NOAA will coordinate a research and education 
information exchange throughout the National Estuarine Research Reserve 
System. As part of this role, NOAA will ensure that information and 
ideas from one Reserve are made available to others in the System. The 
network will enable Reserves to exchange information and research data 
with each other, with universities engaged in estuarine research, and 
with Federal, state, and local agencies. NOAA's objective is a system-
wide program of research and monitoring capable of addressing the 
management issues that affect long-term productivity of our Nation's 
estuaries.

[58 FR 38215, July 15, 1993, as amended at 62 FR 12540, Mar. 17, 1997; 
63 FR 26717, May 14, 1998]