The Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary (MBNMS) is a
federally protected marine area offshore of
California's
Big Sur and
central coast in the United States. It is the largest US national marine sanctuary and has a shoreline length of 276 miles (444 km) stretching from just north of the
Golden Gate Bridge at
San Francisco to
Cambria in
San Luis Obispo County. Supporting one of the world's most diverse marine
ecosystems, it is home to numerous
mammals,
seabirds,
fishes,
invertebrates and
plants in a remarkably productive
coastal environment. The MBNMS was established in 1992 for the purpose of resource protection, research, education, and public use.
Description
The Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary (MBNMS) is one of the largest of a system of 14 National Marine Sanctuaries administered by the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), within the
U.S. Department of Commerce. It stretches from Rocky Point in
Marin County, just north of the
Golden Gate Bridge, to the town of
Cambria in
San Luis Obispo County, and encompasses a shoreline length of 276 miles (444 km) and 6,094 square miles (15,783 km2) of ocean surrounding
Monterey Bay. Its seaward boundary is an average of 30 miles (48 km) offshore, and shoreward boundary the mean
high tide. Its area is 6,094 square statute miles or 4,024 square nautical miles. The deepest point is 10,663 feet (3,250 meters) in the
Monterey Submarine Canyon, which is deeper than the
Grand Canyon. The average ocean surface temperature is 55 °F (13 °C).
The sanctuary provides habitat for 36 species of marine mammals, 94 species of seabirds, at least 525 species of fish, four of turtles, 31
phyla of invertebrates, and more than 450 species of marine algae.[1] Historical sites include 1,276 reported shipwrecks and 718 prehistoric sites. The MBNMS has major programs for research and monitoring, and another for education and outreach. Public recreation activities such as kayaking, SCUBA diving, and surfing are permitted, along with commercial fishing. Oil drilling and
seabed mining are banned to protect the sanctuary.[2] The sanctuary provides economic value via ecotourism as well as fishery resources including the Dungeness crab and market squid.[3] Otter trawling has been shown to have significantly negatively impact the benthic invertebrate biodiversity in areas where trawling is less restricted.[4] Despite its protection as a National Marine Sanctuary MPA, a study found microplastic concentrations were higher than the global average, with a higher amount closer to shore.[3]
The Sanctuary Advisory Council's twenty voting members represent a variety of local user groups, as well as the general public, plus seven local and state governmental jurisdictions. In addition, the respective managers for the four California National Marine Sanctuaries (
Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary,
Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary,
Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary, and the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary), the
Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve and the
United States Coast Guard sit as non-voting members. Members are appointed competitively by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and serve three-year terms. The Advisory Council meets bi-monthly in open sessions located throughout the almost 300-mile boundary of the Sanctuary.
Working groups of the council: Research Activities Panel, Sanctuary Education Panel, Conservation Working Group, Business & Tourism Activities Panel
Regional partnerships
B-WET (Bay Watershed Education and Training Program): a grant program to provide funding and support for environmental education for students, teachers, and communities throughout the Monterey Bay watershed.
Events and activities
See the MBNMS event calendar for a list of meetings, as well as volunteer events such as Snapshot Day, Urban Watch, First Flush (water quality monitoring programs), and TeamOCEAN (kayaker naturalist program).
The organization launched the Sanctuary Integrated Monitoring Network (SIMoN) website in 2003 to collect metadata for its various monitoring projects. In 2012, this information was released as an
iOS application to allow visitors better access to the over 4,200 photos that have been collected.[7]
In 1988 congress re-authorized the Sanctuaries Act and proposed a sanctuary in Monterey Bay. However, public hearings, with the memory of the
1969 Santa Barbara oil spill, brought protests demanding a larger size. The first Draft Environmental Impact Statement was released in 1990, and a final management plan in June 1992 proposing the extended area. On September 20, 1992, the MBNMS was authorized by legislation proposed by congressman
Leon Panetta. It was the largest federal marine sanctuary.[8][9]
Management
There have been five Superintendents of the MBNMS since its inception:
Terry Jackson (1992 to 1997):[10] Jackson was a NOAA Corps officer that was assigned to the MBNMS as its first manager in 1992. As a NOAA Corps officer, Jackson's land-based assignment ended in 1997. Over the next year, Jackson hired the first MBNMS staffers. Jackson retired from the NOAA Corps in 1998.
Carol Fairfield (June and July 1997): A call for Superintendent applicants went out in the spring of 1997. However, that process was ended by the National Marine Sanctuaries Chief, Stephanie Thornton, because she "did not believe any of the current applicants had the skills she was looking for to be the MBNMS Superintendent."[11] The call for applicants was re-advertised, and Carol Fairfield (with the NOAA's NMFS Protected Resources Program) was selected. Fairfield was selected in June and spent her first month at the Sanctuary Headquarters in
Silver Spring, Maryland. Fairfield was reassigned on July 28, 1997, and Thornton said "Fairfield¹s reassignment is a personnel matter which cannot be discussed in detail."[12]
Joanne Flanders (1997): At the time of Jackson's departure, Joanne Flanders (another NOAA Corps Officer) was Assistant Superintendent. Flanders was appointed Acting Superintendent for about six months.
William J. Douros (1998 to 2006): In January 1998 William J. Douros, who had previously worked for
Santa Barbara County became superintendent.[13]
Paul Michel (2007 to Present): In 2006 Douros was promoted to West Coast regional director for the National Marine Sanctuary Program. Paul Michel, who had worked at the
Environmental Protection Agency since 1987, became superintendent.[14]
Management of northern section
Since the
Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary (GFNMS) had been established earlier and had a staff already, the section north of Año Nuevo point near the
San Mateo County line was managed by GFNMS from its office in
San Francisco. By 1996, Terry Jackson of MBNMS requested to have the management boundaries match the preserve. Ed Ueber of GFNMS saw no reason to change.[15]
Oil and gas reserves
There are oil and gas reserves off the coast, but exploration has not been permitted. In 1982, Interior Secretary
James G. Watt proposed opening the Central California coast
outer continental shelf to oil and gas exploration.[16] California residents and politicians strongly opposed the proposal and it was defeated.[17] In 1990, President
George H. W. Bush used an obscure 1953 law to permanently ban oil and gas development in California's Monterey Bay. In late December 2016, President Obama used the same law to ban oil exploration from Hearst Castle to Point Arena in Mendocino County, California.[18]
In July 2017, under the direction of
Executive Order 13795[19] from President
Donald Trump, the U.S. Department of Commerce began re-evaluating the protected status of the sanctuary, which includes the
Davidson Seamount off the coast of Big Sur. The seamount, at 23 nmi (43 km; 26 mi) long, 7 nmi (13 km; 8.1 mi) wide, and 7,480 feet (2,280 m) high, is one of the largest in the world. Opening the area to oil and gas exploration was opposed by many environmentalists and residents.[20]
Related protection areas
A large number of protected areas have overlapping jurisdictions. From roughly from north to south:[21]
^"Big Sur Coast Land Use Plan"(PDF). Monterey County Planning Department. February 11, 1981. Archived from
the original(PDF) on June 6, 2011. Retrieved November 15, 2009.
Michelle Ann Knight (1997). A Political Culture of Conservation: Citizen Action and Marine Conservation in the Monterey Bay.
University of California Santa Cruz. Ph.D. dissertation