[Federal Register: October 22, 2001 (Volume 66, Number 204)]
[Notices] 
[Page 53398-53402]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr22oc01-31] 
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
[Docket No. 000202024-1248-02; I.D. 100401B]
  RIN 0648-ZA79

  Announcement of Funding Opportunity to Submit Proposals for the 
  South Florida Ecosystem Research and Monitoring Program (SFP)

AGENCY: Center for Sponsored Coastal Ocean Research/Coastal Ocean 
  Program (CSCOR/COP), National Ocean Service (NOS), National Oceanic and 
  Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Department of Commerce.

ACTION: Notice of Funding Availability for financial assistance for 
  project grants and cooperative agreements.

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SUMMARY: The purpose of this notice is to advise the public that CSCOR/
  COP is soliciting 1-year and 2-year proposals to support coastal 
  ecosystem studies in South Florida including Florida Bay, Florida Keys, 
  the Florida Keys National

[[Page 53399]]

Marine Sanctuary (FKNMS), and adjacent coastal waters. It will provide 
  support for research and monitoring activities for the South Florida 
  Ecosystem Restoration Prediction and Modeling Program (SFERPM), the 
  South Florida Living Marine Resources Program (SFLMR), and the Florida 
  Keys National Marine Sanctuary (FKNMS). The overall goal of this 
  Announcement is to fund high priority research and monitoring needed to 
  predict the impacts of Everglades restoration on the South Florida 
  coastal ecosystem. Funding is contingent upon the availability of 
  Federal appropriations. It is anticipated that projects funded under 
  this announcement will have a March 1, 2002 start date.

DATES: The deadline for receipt of proposals at the COP office is 3 
  p.m., e.s.t. November 29, 2001. (Note that late-arriving applications 
  provided to a delivery service on or before November 28, 2001, with 
  delivery guaranteed before 3 p.m., e.s.t. on November 29, 2001, will be 
  accepted for review if the applicant can document that the application 
  was provided to the delivery service with delivery to the address 
  listed below guaranteed prior to the specified closing date and time, 
  and, in any event, the proposals are received in the COP office by 3 
  p.m., e.s.t., no later than 2 business days following the closing 
  date.)

ADDRESSES: Submit the original and 19 copies of your proposal to Center 
  for Sponsored Coastal Ocean Research/Coastal Ocean Program (N/SCI 2), 
  SSMC#4, 8th Floor, Station 8243, 1305 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, 
  MD 20910. NOAA and Standard Form Applications with instructions are 
  accessible on the following COP Internet Site: http://www.cop.noaa.gov 
  under the COP Grants Support Section, Part D, Application Forms for 
  Initial Proposal Submission. Forms may be viewed and, in most cases, 
  filled in by computer. All forms must be printed, completed, and mailed 
  to CSCOR/COP with original signatures. Blue ink for original signatures 
  is recommended but not required. If you are unable to access this 
  information, you may call CSCOR/COP at 301-713-3338 to leave a mailing 
  request.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Technical Information. Larry Pugh, SFP 
  2002 Program Manager, CSCOR/COP, 301-713-3338/ext 160, Internet: 
  larry.pugh@noaa.gov
  Business Management Information. Leslie McDonald, COP Grants 
  Administrator, 301-713-3338/ext 155, Internet: Leslie.McDonald@noaa.gov

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Electronic Access

Background information on the South Florida Ecosystem Restoration 
  Prediction and Modeling program, including descriptions of presently 
  funded projects, results, data management, and programmatic 
  infrastructure (including small boat access and policy) can be found at 
  http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/ocd/sferpm.
  Background information on the Florida Bay and Adjacent Marine 
  Systems Interagency Science Program, including the Program Management 
  Committee (PMC), Scientific Oversight Panel (SOP), copies of the annual 
  science conference abstracts, workshop reports, and present Strategic 
  Science Plan, can be found at http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/flbay.
  Background information regarding Florida Keys National Marine 
  Sanctuary can be found at http://www.fknms.nos.noaa.gov.
  Background information regarding South Florida Ecosystem 
  Restoration (SFER) in general can be found at http://www.sfrestore.org, 
  but the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) can be found 
  at http://www.evergladesplan.org.

Background

Program Description

For complete program description and other requirements criteria 
  for the Coastal Ocean Program, see COP's General Grant Administration 
  Terms and Conditions annual notification in the Federal Register (65 FR 
  62706, October 19, 2000) and at the COP home page.
  This program is one of the Federal and state programs contributing 
  to the Florida Bay and Adjacent Marine Systems Interagency Science 
  Program, which is designed to understand the effects of South Florida 
  ecosystem restoration.
  The activities conducted to restore the South Florida ecosystem 
  occur predominantly upstream of Florida Bay, and restoration impacts 
  may not be direct or immediate. Through funding of the research 
  priorities identified here, COP will fund an integrated suite of 
  activities to better understand the coastal and marine ecosystem 
  adjacent to the Everglades, comprising Florida Bay and the FKNMS. The 
  GOAL of the complete effort is to develop a capability to predict the 
  impacts of proposed Everglades Restoration activities on the coastal 
  system from the mangroves to the coral reefs.

Research Areas

To address the goal of developing a capability to predict changes 
  in coastal ecosystems resulting from Restoration activities, this 
  announcement has five specific areas of interest: nutrient inputs and 
  dynamics, water quality, circulation and physical oceanography, 
  fisheries and protected resources, and Florida Keys habitat 
  characterization and research.
  (1) Nutrient Inputs and Dynamics. Proposals are solicited to 
  quantitatively address the extent, relative contribution, and 
  distribution of groundwater-derived nutrients into Florida Bay and the 
  FKNMS at present and under various upstream water management 
  alternatives. Proposals are also solicited on nutrient cycles within 
  the water column and between the water column and benthos. A priority 
  topic for nutrient proposals will be biogeochemical processes 
  (including the microbial loop) governing the bio-availability of 
  organic nitrogen.
  (2) Water Quality. The health of the coral reef community of the 
  FKNMS depends upon the quality (temperature, salinity, nutrients, 
  inorganic particulate load and chemical contaminants) of the waters 
  that flow over them. With Everglades restoration, water quality 
  throughout South Florida coastal waters will be changed. Proposals are 
  now solicited that address the chemical, biological, and optical 
  characteristics of Bay waters that exit Keys passes and potentially 
  reach the reef tract and protected areas in the FKNMS. Priority will be 
  given to projects coordinated with and complementary to physical 
  oceanographic field studies and to projects addressing timely 
  dissemination of information to the Interagency SFER science community 
  and the public.
  (3) Circulation and Physical Oceanography. In the area of 
  Circulation and Physical Oceanography, emphasis is placed on predicting 
  the impacts of different restoration scenarios both upstream and in the 
  Keys in the context of integrated natural system variability. Proposals 
  are solicited to monitor the oceanographic parameters needed in order 
  to verify and initialize circulation models; quantify flows 
  intermittently exiting through Keys passages and potentially reaching 
  the reef tract; determine basin residence and turnover times, 
  circulation, and flow within the Bay and upstream effects upon the Dry 
  Tortugas Ecological Reserve; and improve evaporation and sediment 
  transport estimates.
  (4) Fisheries and Protected Resources. Ecosystem changes caused by 
  SFER

[[Page 53400]]

activities have ultimate impacts on the sustainability of higher 
  trophic level (HTL) species, including fishery and protected resources, 
  which have widely recognized importance. Proposals are solicited to 
  build models and provide information to increase predictive capability 
  in linking higher trophic levels to ER activities. Proposals should be 
  directed at the following research priorities: (1) determining human 
  (e.g., water management, fishing) and natural influences on biological 
  processes affecting growth, survival, and recruitment of HTL species; 
  (2) determining the major factors that influence distribution and 
  abundance patterns and community and trophic structure; (3) identifying 
  major pathways, mechanisms, and influencing factors in the transport of 
  pre-settlement stages of offshore-spawning species onto nursery 
  grounds; or (4) defining and quantifying major ecological processes 
  that are substantially influenced by HTL species distributions or 
  community and trophic structure.
  (5) Florida Keys Habitat Characterization and Research. Coral 
  reefs, seagrass beds, and hardbottom communities comprise the 
  submerged, biogenic habitats of the FKNMS that support diverse species 
  assemblages. Monitoring the coral reefs, seagrass beds, and hardbottom 
  communities is necessary to provide a basis for detecting potential 
  changes associated with Everglades restoration and fully protected 
  zones.
  Over the past several years, there has been a decline in the 
  abundance of live coral in the FKNMS and shifting patterns of relative 
  abundance of seagrass species in Florida Bay. Recently, management 
  issues concerning hardbottom communities could not be addressed because 
  of a lack of ecological research. Proposals are now solicited to 
  investigate (a) causes of coral decline with emphasis on cause and 
  effect; (b) possible associations between water quality and seagrass 
  distribution; and (c) the functional significance of hardbottom 
  communities in the FKNMS ecosystem.
  The fully protected zones of the FKNMS, including the Tortugas 
  Ecological Reserve, were created to assist in the protection of 
  biological diversity and to disperse resource utilization in order to 
  reduce user conflicts and to lessen the concentrated impact to marine 
  organisms on heavily used reefs. Proposals are solicited to monitor 
  commercially important species (e.g., spiny lobster) and key depleted 
  fishery species (e.g., queen conch) and to create ecosystem models of 
  reef fish communities to predict the effects of zoning on species 
  diversity, abundance, and trophic structure.

Part I: Schedule and Proposal Submission

This document requests full proposals only. The provisions for 
  proposal preparation provided here are mandatory. Proposals received 
  after the published deadline or proposals that deviate from the 
  prescribed format will be returned to the sender without further 
  consideration. Information regarding this announcement, additional 
  background information, and required Federal forms are available on the 
  COP home page.

Full Proposals

Applications submitted in response to this announcement require an 
  original proposal and 19 proposal copies at time of submission. This 
  includes color or high-resolution graphics, unusually sized materials, 
  or otherwise unusual materials submitted as part of the proposal. For 
  color graphics, submit either color originals or color copies. The 
  stated requirements for the number of proposal copies provide for a 
  timely review process. Facsimile transmissions and electronic mail 
  submission of full proposals will not be accepted.

Required Elements

All recipients must follow the instructions in the preparation of 
  the CSCOR/COP application forms included in this document in Part II: 
  Further Supplementary Information, (10) Application forms and kit. Each 
  proposal must also include the following eight elements:
  (1) Signed Summary title page. The title page should be signed by 
  the Principal Investigator (PI). The Summary Title page identifies the 
  project's title starting with the acronym SFP 2002 (South Florida 
  Project), a short title (less than 50 characters); and the PI's name 
  and affiliation, complete address, phone, FAX and E-mail information. 
  The requested budget for each fiscal year should be included on the 
  Summary Title page. Multi-institution proposals must include signed 
  Summary Title pages from each institution.
  (2) One-page abstract/project summary. The Project Summary 
  (Abstract) Form, which is to be submitted at time of application, shall 
  include an introduction of the problem, rationale, scientific 
  objectives and/or hypotheses to be tested, and a brief summary of work 
  to be completed. The prescribed COP format for the Project Summary Form 
  can be found on the COP Internet site under the COP Grants Support 
  section, Part D.
  The summary should appear on a separate page, headed with the 
  proposal title, institution(s), investigator(s), total proposed cost 
  and budget period. It should be written in the third person. The 
  summary is used to help compare proposals quickly and allows the 
  respondents to summarize these key points in their own words.
  (3) Statement of work/project description. The proposed project 
  must be completely described, including identification of the problem, 
  scientific objectives, proposed methodology, relevance to the SFP 2002 
  program goal. The project description section (including relevant 
  results from prior support) should not exceed 15 pages. Page limits are 
  inclusive of figures and other visual materials, but exclusive of 
  references and milestone chart.
  This section should clearly identify project management with a 
  description of the functions of each PI within a team. It should 
  provide a full scientific justification for the research, do not simply 
  reiterate justifications presented in this document. It should also 
  include:
  (a) The objective for the period of proposed work and its expected 
  significance;
  (b) The relation to the present state of knowledge in the field and 
  relation to previous work and work in progress by the proposing 
  principal investigator(s);
  (c) A discussion of how the proposed project lends value to the 
  program goal;
  (d) Potential coordination with other investigators; and,
  (e) References cited.
  Reference information is required. Each reference must include the 
  name(s) of all authors in the same sequence in which they appear in the 
  publications, the article title, volume number, page numbers and year 
  of publications. While there is no established page limitation, this 
  section should include bibliographic citations only and should not be 
  used to provide parenthetical information outside the 15-page project 
  description.
  (4) Milestone chart. Provide time lines of major tasks covering the 
  12- to 24-month duration of the proposed project.
  (5) Budget and Application Forms. Both NOAA and COP-specific 
  application forms may be obtained at the COP Grants website. Forms may 
  be viewed and, in most cases, filled in by computer. All forms must be 
  printed, completed, and mailed to CSCOR/COP; original signatures in 
  blue ink are encouraged. If applicants are unable to access this 
  information, they may contact the CSCOR/COP grants administrator 
  previously listed in the

[[Page 53401]]

section FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
  At time of proposal submission, all applicants must submit the 
  Standard Form, SF-424 (Rev 7-97) Application for Federal Assistance to 
  indicate the total amount of funding proposed for the whole project 
  period. Applicants must also submit a COP Summary Proposal Budget Form 
  for each fiscal year increment. Multi-institution proposals must 
  include a Summary Proposal Budget Form for each institution. Use of 
  this budget form will provide for a detailed annual budget and for the 
  level of detail required by the COP program staff to evaluate the 
  effort to be invested by investigators and staff on a specific project. 
  The COP budget form is compatible with forms in use by other agencies 
  that participate in joint projects with COP and can be found on the COP 
  home page under COP Grants Support, Part D. All applications must 
  include a budget narrative and a justification to support all proposed 
  budget categories. The SF-424A, Budget Information (Non-Construction) 
  Form, will be requested only from those applicants subsequently 
  recommended for award.
  (6) Biographical sketch. With each proposal, the following must be 
  included: abbreviated curriculum vitae, two pages per investigator; a 
  list of up to five publications most closely related to the proposed 
  project and up to five other significant publications; and list of all 
  persons (including their organizational affiliation), in alphabetical 
  order, who have collaborated on a project, book, article, or paper 
  within the last 48 months. If there are no collaborators, this should 
  be so indicated. Students, post-doctoral associates, and graduate and 
  postgraduate advisors of the PI should also be disclosed. This 
  information is used to help identify potential conflicts of interest or 
  bias in the selection of reviewers.
  (7) Proposal format and assembly. The original proposal should be 
  clamped in the upper left-hand corner, but left unbound. The 19 
  additional copies can be stapled in the upper left-hand corner or bound 
  on the left edge. The page margin must be one inch (2.5 cm) margins at 
  the top, bottom, left and right, and the typeface standard 12-points 
  size must be clear and easily legible. Proposals should be single 
  spaced.

Part II: FURTHER SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

(1) Program authorities. For a list of all program authorities for 
  the Coastal Ocean Program, see the General Grant Administration Terms 
  and Conditions of the Coastal Ocean Program published in the Federal 
  Register (65 FR 62706, October 19, 2000) and at the COP home page. 
  Specific Authority cited for this Announcement is 33 U.S.C. 1442.
  (2) Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Number. The CFDA 
  number for the Coastal Ocean Program is 11.478.
  (3) Program description. For complete COP program descriptions, see 
  the General Grant Administration Terms and Conditions of the Coastal 
  Ocean Program published in the Federal Register (65 FR 62706, October 
  19, 2000).
  (4) Funding availability. Funding is contingent upon receipt of 
  fiscal years 2002-2003 Federal appropriations. Approximately $2.8 
  million per year for Fiscal Year 2002 and Fiscal Year 2003 will be available for SFP 
  activities under this announcement. Up to $2.1 million of these funds 
  will be provided by COP and up to $0.6 million will be provided by 
  NOAA/NMFS/SEFSC.
  If an application is selected for funding, NOAA has no obligation 
  to provide any additional prospective funding in connection with that 
  award in subsequent years. Renewal of an award to increase funding or 
  to extend the period of performance is based on satisfactory 
  performance and is at the total discretion of the funding agency.
  Publication of this notice does not obligate any agency to any 
  specific award or to obligate any part of the entire amount of funds 
  available. Recipients and subrecipients are subject to all Federal laws 
  and agency policies, regulations and procedures applicable to Federal 
  financial assistance awards.
  (5) Matching requirements. None. (6) Type of funding instrument. 
  Project Grants for non-Federal applicants, interagency transfer 
  agreements, or any other appropriate mechanisms other than project 
  grants or cooperative agreements for Federal applicants.
  (7) Eligibility criteria. For complete eligibility criteria for the 
  COP, see COP's General Grant Administration Terms and Conditions annual 
  document in the Federal Register (65 FR 62706, October 19, 2000) and 
  the COP home page. Eligible applicants are institutions of higher 
  education, not-for-profit institutions, international organizations, 
  state, local and Indian tribal governments and Federal agencies. COP 
  will accept proposals that include foreign researchers as collaborators 
  with a researcher who is affiliated with a U.S. academic institution, 
  Federal agency, or any other non-profit organization.
  Applications from non-Federal and Federal applicants will be 
  competed against each other. Proposals selected for funding from non-
  Federal applicants will be funded through a project grant or 
  cooperative agreement under the terms of this notice. Proposals 
  selected for funding from NOAA employees shall be effected by an intra-
  agency fund transfer. Proposals selected for funding from a non-NOAA 
  Federal agency will be funded through an inter-agency transfer.
  PLEASE NOTE: Before non-NOAA Federal applicants may be funded, they 
  must demonstrate that they have legal authority to receive funds from 
  another Federal agency in excess of their appropriation. Because this 
  announcement is not proposing to procure goods or services from 
  applicants, the Economy Act (31 USC 1535) is not an appropriate legal 
  basis.
  (8) Award period. Full Proposals can cover a project period from 1 
  to 2 years, i.e., from date of award up to 24 consecutive months. Multi-
  year project period funding will be funded incrementally on an annual 
  basis. For NOAA awards, each annual award shall require an 
  Implementation Plan and statement of work that can be easily divided 
  into annual increments of meaningful work representing solid 
  accomplishments (if prospective funding is not made available, or is 
  discontinued).
  (9) Indirect costs. If indirect costs are proposed, the total 
  dollar amount of the indirect costs proposed in an application must not 
  exceed the indirect cost rate negotiated and approved by a cognizant 
  Federal agency prior to the proposed effective date of the award.
  (10) Application forms and kit. For complete information on 
  application forms for the COP, see COP's General Grant Administration 
  Terms and Conditions annual Document in the Federal Register (65 FR 
  62706, October 19, 2000); at the COP home page; and the information 
  given under Required Elements, paragraph (5) Budget.
  (11) Project funding priorities. For description of project funding 
  priorities, see COP's General Grant Administration Terms and Conditions 
  annual notification in the Federal Register (65 FR 62706, October 19, 
  2000) and at the COP home page.
  (l2) Evaluation criteria. For complete information on evaluation 
  criteria, see COP's General Grant Administration Terms and Conditions 
  annual Document in the Federal Register (65 FR 62706, October 19, 2000) 
  and at the COP home page.
  (13) Selection procedures. For complete information on selection 
  procedures, see COP's General Grant Administration Terms and Conditions

[[Page 53402]]

annual Document in the Federal Register (65 FR 62706, October 19, 2000) 
  and at the COP home page. All proposals received under this specific 
  Document will be evaluated and ranked individually in accordance with 
  the assigned weights of the above evaluation criteria by independent 
  peer mail review and panel review. No consensus advice will be given by 
  the independent peer mail review or the review panel.
  (14) Other requirements. As participants in the Interagency Science 
  Program, funded principal investigators will be expected to:
  (a) Participate in meetings for planning and coordination of the 
  Program. This includes attending and contributing to the annual 
  Interagency Florida Bay Science Program Conference, Research Team 
  Meetings, and other relevant technical workshops.
  (b) Promptly quality control their data and make them readily 
  available through the Coordinating Office in accordance with the Data 
  Policy, mentioned earlier in this document.
  (c) Assist the Coordinating Office in the synthesis and 
  interpretation of research results and the development of products of 
  value to restoration and resource.
  (d) Work with the Coordinating Office regarding small boat 
  requirements (if any) to schedule access to the dedicated research 
  vessel (description available on the SFERPM website earlier cited). If 
  your project will have small boat needs that you cannot furnish, please 
  provide description and schedule requirements in your proposal.
  (e) If your project uses or relies on data/information from the 
  NOAA CMAN SEAKEYS meteorological/oceanographic monitoring network, 
  please provide description and requirements in your proposal. 
  Similarly, if your project uses/relies on data/information from 
  research categories in this Announcement, other than the one you are 
  proposing to study, please describe.
  For a complete description of other requirements, see COP's General 
  Grant Administration Terms and Conditions annual Document in the 
  Federal Register (65 FR 62706, October 19, 2000) and at the COP home 
  page. NOAA has specific requirements that environmental data be 
  submitted to the National Oceanographic Data Center.
  (f) The Department of Commerce Pre-Award Notification Requirements 
  for Grants and Cooperative Agreements contained in the Federal Register 
  (66 FR 49917, October 1, 2001) are applicable to this solicitation.
  (15) Intergovernmental review. Applications under this program are 
  not subject to Executive Order 12372, ``Intergovernmental Review of 
  Federal Programs.''
  (16) This notification involves collection-of-information 
  requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act. The use of 
  Standard Forms 424, 424A, 424B, and SF-LLL has been approved by the 
  Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under control numbers 0348-0043, 
  0348-0044, 0348-0040 and 0348-0046.
  The following requirements have been approved by OMB under control 
  number 0648-0384: a Summary Proposal Budget Form (30 minutes per 
  response), a Project Summary Form (30 minutes per response), a 
  standardized format for the Annual Performance Report (5 hours per 
  response), a standardized format for the Final Report (10 hours per 
  response) and the submission of up to 20 copies of proposals (10 
  minutes per response). The response estimates include the time for 
  reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and 
  maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the 
  collection of information. Send comments regarding this burden estimate 
  or any other aspect of this collection of information, including 
  suggestions for reducing this burden, to Leslie.McDonald@noaa.gov. 
  Copies of these forms and formats can be found on the COP home page 
  under Grants Support sections, Parts D and F.
  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person is required 
  to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to a penalty for failure 
  to comply with a collection of information subject to the requirements 
  of the Paperwork Reduction Act, unless that collection displays a 
  currently valid OMB control number.

Dated: October 16, 2001.
  Jamison S. Hawkins,
  Deputy Assistant Administrator for Ocean Services and Coastal Zone 
  Management.
  [FR Doc. 01-26553 Filed 10-19-01; 8:45 am]
  BILLING CODE 3510-JS-S