The National Marine Fisheries Service operates six fisheries science centers covering marine fisheries conducted by the United States. The science centers correspond roughly to the administrative division of fisheries management into five regions, with the west coast utilizing two fisheries science centers. The Northeast Fisheries Science Center is headquartered in
Woods Hole, Massachusetts. It operates laboratories at five other locations, and an additional marine field station. Its primary mission is the management of fisheries on the Northeast
shelf. However, it also oversees the operation of the
National Systematics Lab, in conjunction with the Smithsonian Institution. The Northeast Fisheries Science Center also operates the
Woods Hole Science Aquarium in conjunction with the
Marine Biological Laboratory. The NMFS maintains the Northwest and Alaska Fisheries Science Centers, both located in
Seattle. The Alaska Fisheries Science Center is located on the grounds of the now-closed
Naval Station Puget Sound. The Northwest Fisheries Science Center is located adjacent to the
University of Washington. This site is also home to the Northwest and Alaska Fisheries Science Center Library, founded in 1931. As of 2011, this library contained 16,000 books and subscribed to 250 periodicals. Its subject interests include aquatic science, biochemistry, fisheries biology, fisheries management, food science, and marine science. The Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center is headquartered in
Honolulu, Hawaii, on the campus of the
University of Hawaii at Monoa. It operates several facilities, including facilities for NOAA ships at
Ford Island. The Southeast Fisheries Science Center is headquartered in
Miami, Florida, and monitors marine fisheries in the American Southeast, including
Puerto Rico and the
US Virgin Islands. It additionally operates five labs, some of which operate multiple facilities. The Southwest Fisheries Science Center, headquartered in
La Jolla, California, monitors and advises fisheries in NOAA's Southwest region. It operates facilities on the campus of the
Scripps Institution of Oceanography. In 2013, a large facility on La Jolla Shores Drive was built by the architects Gould Evans, replacing an older building that was threatened by
coastal erosion. (Although the original architects, 50 years earlier, had been informed that they were building on a "block-glide landslide," they received exemption "from local building code requirements for a preconstruction engineering geology study because it was a U.S. government complex." A 1979 book on coastal erosion reported that the building was "disastrously located. The 'Tuna Hilton' rests partially on a piece of bluff known as a slump block. Designers say the building is specially articulated so that it should stay intact as the bluff falls from underneath its seaward end.") == Controversies ==