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USCRP brings together federal researchers, academics, and coastal stakeholders to discuss societal needs within specific topical areas and identify related science gaps. The thematic workshops produce authoritative products that define user needs, prioritize research directions, and inform annual academic funding opportunities.
In January 2021, stakeholders discussed their challenges related to coastal human & ecosystem health during a virtual workshop series focusing on the following topics. Read more here.
1. Identifying and Mitigating Coastal Pollution: a) Nutrients and Harmful Algal Blooms, b) Fecal Pollutants, and c) Microplastics, and
2. Resilient Coastal Ecosystems: a) Fisheries, b) Shellfisheries, and c) Natural and nature-based features.
Funding Opportunity: USCRP 2021 RFP
Authoritative Product: Workshop Report

Stakeholders discussed emergency managers needs as they compared to our fields' present capabilities for modeling storm processes and forecasting impacts to determine/prioritize where advancements were needed.
Funding Awarded: USCRP FY18 funded 9 projects with $550,000
Authoritative Product: Workshop Report

Stakeholders communicated problems associated with managing dynamic dune systems adjacent to coastal development.
Funding Awarded: over $260,000 in funding for graduate student research. Fact sheets for the research efforts are available below.
Authoritative Product: Workshop Report
2024 marks the 10-year anniversary of the Past and Future of Nearshore Process Research
community visioning session.
Over the past several years, the USCRP has hosted workshops to bring together federal researchers, academics, and coastal stakeholders to discuss societal needs and identify related science gaps within specific topical areas. The workshops produce authoritative products that define user needs, prioritize research directions, and inform funding opportunities.

Hosted in St. Petersburg, participants explored the future direction of coastal research, shared valuable insights, and engaged in stimulating discussions with professionals and researchers who are passionate about addressing the challenges faced by coastal communities.

Bring together federal agencies, stakeholders, and academia to identify and prioritize key management challenges and high-priority science gaps to guide the next decade of coastal research.

Stakeholders and federal and academic researchers met in late 2016 to develop national-scale, collaborative research plans that would include federal and non-federal partners. These projects were supposed to address problems and topics that would make significant advancements through combined agency/researcher collaboration.
Outcomes: Several important collaborative projects were developed during this workshop including the Coastal Model Test Bed, DUNEX, and a rapid deployment plan that led to the NSF-funded Nearshore Extreme Events Reconnaissance (NEER).

The USCRP was conceptualized during this 2014 workshop that developed a vision for nearshore processes research where societal needs and science challenges intersect. The vision was comprised of three broad research themes: long-term coastal evolution due to natural and anthropogenic processes; extreme events: flooding, erosion, and subsequent recovery; and the physical, biological and chemical processes impacting human and ecosystem health.
Authoritative Product: The seminal Nearshore Report is a consensus document that recommended multi-agency investment into a program to coordinate and fund research to address the above themes.











In March 2016, federal representatives met in Washington, D.C. to inventory ongoing federal research efforts in long-term coastal evolution, extreme events, human and ecosystem health, and research infrastructure. The goal was to identify opportunities for collaboration as well as research gaps or areas of societal concern that would benefit from scientific research.
Authoritative Product: The National Plan highlighted over 350 federal and non-federal coastal research efforts, as well as examples of successful interagency collaborations. The plan provided recommendations for immediate execution and long-term planning toward increased collaboration to gain efficiencies.

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