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Catalog Details

Summary

Short Citation
West Coast Regional Office, 2024: West Coast Marine Mammal Stranding Network_Dead, https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/inport/item/72552.
Full Citation Examples

Abstract

The Marine Mammal Protection Act formalized a program to provide response to reports of strandings of marine mammals and unusual mortality events. This was done by creating a network of parties from different locations that would be responsible for responding to stranding events within their zone. Most stranding zones in California are defined by county boundaries. Some zones include only one or two counties, but California's largest zone covers 8 coastal counties and includes another 10 where the San Francisco Bay and Sacramento - San Joaquin River Delta reach inland. Los Angeles county has its coastline divided into two stranding zones, and one of those two zones also has multiple (2) organizations responsible for strandings within it.Stranding reporting areas of the coast of Oregon and Washington and Puget Sound are based upon the authorizations for each facility in their Stranding Agreement (SA) - each SA lists a primary response area granted to the organization, and these lines correspond to that. These zones are often divided more by geographical considerations than by political boundaries, such as island groups or cross-water zones. One zone is the responsibility of two different organizations because each has a different specialty. The Cascade Research Collective is responsible for Cetacean strandings in that area and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Marine Mammal Investigations is responsible for pinniped strandings in the same area.A stranding is:• a dead marine mammal on the beach or in the water;• a marine mammal that is alive on the shore and unable to return to the water under its own power;• a marine mammal that is alive on the shore and, although able to return to the water, is in need of apparent medical attention;• a marine mammal in the water and cannot return to its natural habitat under its own power or without assistance.In most stranding cases, the cause of the stranding is unknown, but some identified causes have included disease, parasite infestation, harmful algal blooms, injuries from ship strikes or fishery entanglements, pollution exposure, trauma, and starvation. While most stranded animals are found dead, some strand alive. In a limited number of cases it's possible to transport them to regional rehabilitation centers for care. In rare cases, successfully rehabilitated animals are returned to the wild. With the passage of the Endangered Species Act, in 1973 and the Marine Turtle Conservation Act of 2004, protection of sea turtle species, most of which are endangered or threatened, has resulted in them being added to the list of species which stranding organizations are responsible for.

Distribution Information

Use Constraints:

These data are not to be used for navigational purposes.

Controlled Theme Keywords

biota, oceans

Child Items

Type Title
Entity Liv_Ded_dissolve_v3

Contact Information

Metadata Contact
Robert Markle
robert.markle@noaa.gov
503-230-5419

Extents

Geographic Area 1

-125.681944° W, -117.095° E, 49° N, 32.534444° S

Time Frame 1
2024 - Present

Item Identification

Title: West Coast Marine Mammal Stranding Network_Dead
Status: In Work
Publication Date: 2019-09-04
Abstract:

The Marine Mammal Protection Act formalized a program to provide response to reports of strandings of marine mammals and unusual mortality events. This was done by creating a network of parties from different locations that would be responsible for responding to stranding events within their zone. Most stranding zones in California are defined by county boundaries. Some zones include only one or two counties, but California's largest zone covers 8 coastal counties and includes another 10 where the San Francisco Bay and Sacramento - San Joaquin River Delta reach inland. Los Angeles county has its coastline divided into two stranding zones, and one of those two zones also has multiple (2) organizations responsible for strandings within it.Stranding reporting areas of the coast of Oregon and Washington and Puget Sound are based upon the authorizations for each facility in their Stranding Agreement (SA) - each SA lists a primary response area granted to the organization, and these lines correspond to that. These zones are often divided more by geographical considerations than by political boundaries, such as island groups or cross-water zones. One zone is the responsibility of two different organizations because each has a different specialty. The Cascade Research Collective is responsible for Cetacean strandings in that area and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Marine Mammal Investigations is responsible for pinniped strandings in the same area.A stranding is:• a dead marine mammal on the beach or in the water;• a marine mammal that is alive on the shore and unable to return to the water under its own power;• a marine mammal that is alive on the shore and, although able to return to the water, is in need of apparent medical attention;• a marine mammal in the water and cannot return to its natural habitat under its own power or without assistance.In most stranding cases, the cause of the stranding is unknown, but some identified causes have included disease, parasite infestation, harmful algal blooms, injuries from ship strikes or fishery entanglements, pollution exposure, trauma, and starvation. While most stranded animals are found dead, some strand alive. In a limited number of cases it's possible to transport them to regional rehabilitation centers for care. In rare cases, successfully rehabilitated animals are returned to the wild. With the passage of the Endangered Species Act, in 1973 and the Marine Turtle Conservation Act of 2004, protection of sea turtle species, most of which are endangered or threatened, has resulted in them being added to the list of species which stranding organizations are responsible for.

Purpose:

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) West Coast Marine Mammal Stranding Network was established in the early 1980s under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA). The Act also formalized the marine mammal health and stranding response program to improve the response of stranding and unusual mortality events. It created a network of parties from different locations that would be responsible for responding to stranding events in their area. Along the Pacific Coast, members of the network respond to marine mammal stranding events along the Washington, Oregon, and California coasts and are part of a nationwide network.

This layer serves as a reference for identifying organizations to which one can report strandings along the Pacific coast. It identifies the respective zones and provides the names and contact numbers for the organizations responsible for responding to strandings within those zones. Sea turtle strandings are also dealt with by the stranding organizations. In California, different organizations respond to live strandings than respond to dead strandings, so this division of labor is identified by different fields for organization name and phone number within the attribute table. In Washington State and Oregon the same stranding organizations respond to both live and dead strandings, so the entries in both sets of fields are the same.

These are a subset of data for partners in California that only respond to dead strandings, created using a filter from the original data layer that encompasses all of the stranding partners.

Keywords

Theme Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
ISO 19115 Topic Category
biota
ISO 19115 Topic Category
oceans
UNCONTROLLED
None cetacean
None contacts
None entanglement
None marine mammal
None network
None pinniped
None sea turtle
None stranding

Spatial Keywords

Thesaurus Keyword
UNCONTROLLED
None California
None Oregon
None Pacific Coast
None Puget Sound
None Washington

Data Set Information

Data Set Scope Code: Data Set
Maintenance Frequency: As Needed
Data Set Credit: NOAA Fisheries West Coast Region; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Division of Realty and Refuge Information

Support Roles

Data Steward

CC ID: 1332998
Date Effective From: 2023-12-20
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Markle, Robert
Address: 1201 NE Lloyd Blvd
Portland, OR 97232
Email Address: robert.markle@noaa.gov
Phone: 503-230-5419

Distributor

CC ID: 1332999
Date Effective From: 2023-12-20
Date Effective To:
Contact (Organization): West Coast Regional Office (WCRO)
Address: 501 West Ocean Blvd
Long Beach, CA 90802-4213
URL: http://www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov/

Metadata Contact

CC ID: 1333000
Date Effective From: 2023-12-20
Date Effective To:
Contact (Person): Markle, Robert
Address: 1201 NE Lloyd Blvd
Portland, OR 97232
Email Address: robert.markle@noaa.gov
Phone: 503-230-5419

Extents

Currentness Reference: Publication Date

Extent Group 1

Extent Description:

Data includes coastlines of Puget Sound and the states of Washington, Oregon, and California and extends from the U.S. - Canada border to the U.S. - Mexico Border

Extent Group 1 / Geographic Area 1

CC ID: 1333002
W° Bound: -125.681944
E° Bound: -117.095
N° Bound: 49
S° Bound: 32.534444

Extent Group 1 / Time Frame 1

CC ID: 1333027
Time Frame Type: Continuing
Start: 2024

Spatial Information

Reference Systems

Reference System 1

CC ID: 1332995

Coordinate Reference System

CRS Type: Geographic 2D
EPSG Code: EPSG:4326
EPSG Name: WGS 84
See Full Coordinate Reference System Information

Access Information

Security Class: Unclassified
Data Use Constraints:

These data are not to be used for navigational purposes.

Distribution Information

Distribution 1

CC ID: 1333003
Download URL: https://services2.arcgis.com/C8EMgrsFcRFL6LrL/arcgis/rest/services/West_Coast_Marine_Mammal_Stranding_Network___Dead/FeatureServer
Distributor: West Coast Regional Office (WCRO) (2023-12-20 - Present)
Description:

Data access URL

Distribution Format: ESRI REST Service

Technical Environment

Description:

Version 6.2 (Build 9200) ; Esri ArcGIS 10.7.0.10450

Data Quality

Conceptual Consistency:

no missing features

These data are believed to be logically consistent although no tests were performed. Specification title2024-02-29T00:00:00Each area of responsibility for stranding network partners was reviewed by NOAA West Coast Fisheries staff1

Lineage

Sources

West Coast Marine Mammal Stranding Network _ Dead

CC ID: 1333028
Contact Role Type: Originator
Contact Type: Organization
Contact Name: NOAA Fisheries West Coast Region
Extent Type: Discrete
Extent Start Date/Time: 2024

Process Steps

Process Step 1

CC ID: 1332993
Description:

Compared and updated (where needed) partner organizations with updated documents

Process Contact: West Coast Regional Office (WCRO)

Child Items

Rubric scores updated every 15m

Rubric Score Type Title
Entity Liv_Ded_dissolve_v3

Catalog Details

Catalog Item ID: 72552
GUID: gov.noaa.nmfs.inport:72552
Metadata Record Created By: Bryan Thom
Metadata Record Created: 2024-05-02 16:17+0000
Metadata Record Last Modified By: David Crouse
Metadata Record Last Modified: 2024-05-03 16:47+0000
Metadata Record Published: 2024-05-03
Owner Org: WCRO
Metadata Publication Status: Published Externally
Do Not Publish?: N
Metadata Last Review Date: 2024-05-02
Metadata Review Frequency: 1 Year
Metadata Next Review Date: 2025-05-02