For the purposes of recovery planning, we grouped Puerto Rico's natural resources into coastal resources (coral reefs and seagrasses, dunes and beaches, and wetlands), natural resources (forests, soil sedimentation and erosion, and threatened and endangered species), environmental issues (debris, landfills, and water quality), and parks and recreation assets (Puerto Rico's national parks, commonwealth recreation sites, and municipal recreation sites). 3 Puerto Rico's coasts, forests, waterways, and biodiversity are important assets for economic development, for the health and well-being of residents and visitors, and for the functioning of Puerto Rico's natural systems. 4 They provide food, clean air and water, materials, and business opportunities in countless ways. And these resources play an important role in communities' safety, cultural heritage, traditions, and sense of place.The contributions or services that natural resources provide to residents and their communities are characterized as provisioning services, regulating services, cultural services, or habitat services (examples of which are illustrated in Figure S.1), each of which has economic value.As shown in the figure, Puerto Rico's forests, mangrove swamps, and wetlands provide land stabilization, water purification, and habitat for food sources, which protect built infrastructure and reduce expenditures resulting from flooding or landslides. Coastal resources, such as beaches and dunes, coral reefs, seagrasses, and marine wetlands, work together to attenuate wave action and storm energy, providing the first line of protection to the 44 coastal municipalities in Puerto Rico (Puerto Rico Climate Change Council, 2013, p. 5). These protections can be substantial: A meta-analysis found that coral reefs can reduce wave energy by up to 97 percent National Ocean Service, undated). Furthermore, by absorbing storm surges and rainwater runoff that can lead to flooding, coastal wetlands can reduce damage to homes and other built infrastructure, which, in turn, reduces human exposure to mold, pollutants, and disease vectors. In Puerto Rico, the economic benefits of provisioning services measured in economic terms are those to productive agriculture, fisheries, recreation, and tourism opportunities. For example, the latest available agricultural census figures indicate that, in 2012, more than 13,000 farms in Puerto Rico sold a total of $547.6 million in agricultural products, which benefit from pollination, pest regulation, air-and water-cycle regulation, and nutrient cycling services of ecosystems (National Agricultural Statistics Service, 2015). Natural resources also contribute to the ocean economy by providing seafood and marine products, recreational opportunities, aesthetics, and cultural identity of the local community. Data from 2012 suggest that the ocean economy accounts for 7 percent of Puerto Rico's total employment, contributing nearly 3 Puerto Rico's national park system is distinct from the U.S. National Park Service. Puerto Rico's national ...