Waterloo Region Record

Oceanic whitetip shark ‘threatened’

- Patrick Whittle

PORTLAND, MAINE — The oceanic whitetip shark’s declining status in the wild warrants listing as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, an arm of the federal government has determined.

The shark is found around the world, mostly in open water, and the conservati­on group Defenders of Wildlife called on the government to list the species. The listing would be the most widespread shark listing in the U.S. to date.

The National Marine Fisheries Service said in a document published in the Federal Register in December that the sharks are indeed likely to become endangered in all or at least a significan­t portion of their range “within the foreseeabl­e future.”

Threats to the sharks include fishing pressure all over the world, as their fins are prized in Asian markets for use in soup. The sharks have declined by 80 to 90 per cent in the Pacific Ocean since the 1990s, and 50 per cent to 85 per cent in the Atlantic Ocean since the 1950s, said Chelsey Young, a natural resource management specialist for the fisheries service.

“The oceanic whitetip has very large pectoral fins, and so they have fetched a high price on the internatio­nal market in Asia,” Young said. “It incentiviz­ed the fin trade.”

The fisheries service is collecting public comments about the shark’s status until March and is expected to make a final decision in November. Listing the species as threatened would afford it protection­s aimed at recovery.

The shark is also listed as “vulnerable” on the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature Red List of Threatened Species. Additional protection­s would only help, said Lora Snyder, a campaign director for conservati­on group Oceana. The group has also pushed for a broader ban on the U.S. shark fin trade, which is already restricted.

“In order to truly combat the global trade of shark fins, which kills tens of millions of sharks every year, we need to pass a full ban in the U.S. on the buying and selling of shark fins,” Snyder said.

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