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2002 News Highlights

Diver and Staghorn Corals
Staghorn corals exhibit the fastest growth of all known western Atlantic corals. Branches can increase in length by 10-20 cm a year. Photo Credit: NOAA/NURP.

Click on the links below to read highlights of NOAA's coral reef activities.

NOAA Administrator Highlights U.S. Contribution to Coral Reef Management, Protection. In a December ceremony at the World Bank, the NOAA Administrator, Vice Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher, joined U.S. and international officials and experts to release the findings of the Global Coral Reef Monitoring Network’s biennial publication, Status of Coral Reefs of the World: 2002. Visit NOAA Public Affairs to view the NOAA press release.

New Reports Assess the Condition of U.S. Coral Reefs, Outline Strategy to Reduce Threats. Two reports on coral reef ecosystems were produced in 2002 in cooperation with the United States Coral Reef Task Force and other partners. Led by NOAA's National Ocean Service, The State of Coral Reef Ecosystems of the United States and Pacific Freely Associated States: 2002 was developed by 38 coral reef experts and 79 expert contributors. NOAA also released A National Coral Reef Action Strategy, a report to Congress outlining specific actions needed in 13 goal areas to reduce threats to reefs and sustain the communities and economies that depend on them.

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News Archive:

2008 NOAA Coral Reef News

2007 NOAA Coral Reef News

2006 NOAA Coral Reef News

2005 NOAA Coral Reef News

2004 NOAA Coral Reef News

2003 NOAA Coral Reef News

2002 NOAA Coral Reef News


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