82 results
 Nauru Department of Commerce,  Industry and Environment

Ridge to Reef Data, Bathymetry Class, Limited Metadata, Compiled in 2018

 Nauru Department of Commerce,  Industry and Environment

Ridge to Reef Data, BIORAP Priority Areas, Limited Metadata, Compiled in 2018

 Nauru Department of Commerce,  Industry and Environment

Ridge to Reef Data, BIORAP Survey Site_Buada, limited meta-data, compiled in 2018

 Nauru Department of Commerce,  Industry and Environment

Ridge to reef data on the BIORAP Survey Site_ijuw anabar. Limited Metadata, compiled in 2018

 Nauru Department of Commerce,  Industry and Environment

Ridge to Reef data, BIORAP Survey Site_Meneng Coast, Limited Meta Data, Compiled in 2018

 Nauru Department of Commerce,  Industry and Environment

Ridge to Reef Data, Coastline of Nauru, limited metadata, compiled in 2018

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

This dataset has an article on plastics that make their way into the ocean and data on plastics and other waste in the Pacific Island region.

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

Regional data on marine pollution: observer pollution events. Marine pollution from ships and waste incidents per country in the Pacific region. Waste composition includes: general garbage, plastics, old fishing gears, metals, waste oils, chemicals.

 PNG Conservation and Environment Protection Authority

Sand reef species list

 Climate Change Directorate

Protected areas of the Marshall Islands.
Data sourced from: IUCN and UNEP-WCMC (2018), The World Database on Protected Areas (WDPA) [On-line], [July 2018]. Cambridge, UK: UNEP-WCMC. Available at: www.protectedplanet.net.

 Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme

The annual and monthly average tide levels (meters) for Kwajalein based on average monthly tide levels from 1947-2020.  

 Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MNRE),  Samoa

SPREP is leading the charge to make the Pacific Games in July go plastic free in an awareness and outreach initiative aptly called Greening of the Games. This dataset holds a draft report and a raw baseline data collected from a clean-up at Mulinu'u executed on the 11th May 2019 by the the Team Samoa Va'a, to contextualize solutions and interventions to address marine litter and plastic pollution.

 Solomon Islands Environment and Conservation Division

The Pacific Islands Forum Fisheries Agency published this dataset with information on economic details for catch and catch vessels in the Asia and Pacific region, with country-level data for Solomon Islands.

 Department of Environment,  Tonga

The Tonga NPOA (sharks) is a policy guideline that ensures conservation and management of oceanic sharks in the Kingdom’s fisheries waters. It also promotes long-term sustainability and optimum use of sharks in Tonga’s Tuna longline fishery in accordance to national development policy frameworks, and special needs and requirements to develop and commercialise its fisheries. In the medium-long term, the Plan serves to minimize any adverse environmental effects of fishing on oceanic shark species.

 Department of Environment,  Tonga

A high level policy document that provides guidance to the management and development of the deep water fisheries in the periods of 2017 - 2019

 Department of Environment,  Tonga

Marine pollution in the Pacific. Regional data

 The Partnership for Interdisciplinary Studies of Coastal Oceans (PISCO)

Research shows that marine reserves are one tool that can help to prevent, slow, or reverse negative changes in the ocean. Marine reserves are places in the ocean that are completely and permanently protected from uses that remove animals and plants or alter their habitats. Increasingly, the public, governmental agencies, commercial groups, and scientists are discussing the idea of establishing more marine reserves to complement existing ocean management. The purpose of this report is to provide a summary of the latest scientific information about marine reserves.

 Environment Department

The high seas lie beyond the 200 nautical mile limits that define the extent of national sovereignty by countries of the world. They cover 64% of the area of the oceans, and nearly half the surface of the planet. They are a global commons, under the stewardship of the United Nations Law of the Sea for the benefit of all nations. But human pressures on the high seas are increasing fast, and urgent action is needed to protect them from harm. Recent research shows that industrial fishing has

 The Nature Conservancy

Fisheries in the Solomon Islands comprise two distinct sectors: the industrial sector which is predominantly off-shore and depends on the abundant tuna resources found in the country's