One
Quarter of the World's Cartilaginous Fish, Namely Sharks and Rays, Face
Imminent Extinction
One quarter of the
world's cartilaginous fish, namely sharks and rays, face extinction within the
next few decades, according to the first study to systematically and globally
assess their fate.
The International
Union for Conservation of Nature's (IUCN's) Shark Specialist Group (SSG),
co-chaired by Nick Dulvy, a Simon Fraser University (SFU) Canada Research Chair
in Marine Biodiversity and Conservation in British Columbia, conducted the
study.
It was published ineLife journal
today.Previous studies have documented local overfishing of some populations of
sharks and rays. But this is the first one to survey their status through out
coastal seas and oceans. It reveals that one-quarter (249) of 1,041 known
shark, ray and chimaera species globally fall under three threatened categories
on the IUCN Red List.
"We now know that
many species of sharks and rays, not just the charismatic white sharks, face
extinction across the ice-free seas of the world," says Dulvy. "There
are no real sanctuaries for sharks where they are safe from overfishing."
Over two decades, the
authors applied the IUCN's Red List categories and criteria to the 1,041
species at 17 workshops involving more than 300 experts. They incorporated all
available information on distribution, catch, abundance, population trends,
habitat use, life histories, threats and conservation measures.
Sharks and rays are at
substantially higher risk of extinction than many other animals and have the
lowest percentage of species considered safe. Using the IUCN Red List, the
authors classified 107 species of rays (including skates) and 74 species of
sharks as threatened. Just 23 percent of species were labeled as being Least
Concern.
The authors identified
two main hotspots for shark and ray depletion -- the Indo-Pacific (particularly
the Gulf of Thailand), the Red Sea and the Mediterranean Sea.
"In the most
peril are the largest species of rays and sharks, especially those living in
relatively shallow water that is accessible to fisheries. The combined effects
of overexploitation -- especially for the lucrative shark fin soup market --
and habit degradation are most severe for the 90 species found in freshwater.
"A whole bunch of
wildly charismatic species is at risk. Rays, including the majestic manta and
devil rays, are generally worse off than sharks. Unless binding commitments to
protect these fish are made now, there is a real risk that our grandchildren
won't see sharks and rays in the wild."
Losing these fish will
be like losing whole chapters of our evolutionary history says Dulvy.
"They are the only living representatives of the first lineage to have
jaws, brains, placentas and the modern immune system of vertebrates."
The potential loss of
the largest species is frightening for many reasons, says Dulvy. "The biggest
species tend to have the greatest predatory role. The loss of top or apex
predators cascades throughout marine ecosystems."
The IUCN SSG is
calling on governments to safeguard sharks, rays and chimaeras through a
variety of measures, including the following: prohibition on catching the most
threatened species, science-based fisheries quotas, protection of key habitats
and improved enforcement.
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