The Guardian (USA)

Global shark and ray population crashed more than 70% in past 50 years – study

- Oliver Milman

The global population of sharks and rays has crashed by more than 70% in the past 50 years, researcher­s have determined for the first time, with massive ongoing losses pushing many species towards extinction.

A huge increase in fishing since 1970 has ravaged the abundance of sharks and rays in our oceans, with previously widespread species such as hammerhead sharks now facing the threat of being wiped out, the study found. Half of the world’s 31 oceanic shark species are now listed as either endangered or critically endangered by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. The giant manta ray is also endangered.

“The decline isn’t stopping, which is a problem,” said Nathan Pacoureau, a researcher at Simon Fraser University in Canada who was lead author of the study, published in Nature. “Everything in our oceans is so depleted now. We need proactive measures to prevent total collapse, this should be a wake up call for policy makers.”

Using a raft of previous studies and catch data, the researcher­s compiled the first global census for shark and ray species, finding there has been an overall 71% decline since 1970. The losses could be even deeper in reality, with insufficie­nt data to chart population trends back to the 1950s, when the explosion in mass industrial­ized fishing started.

While sharks and rays can be affected by ship strikes, oil and gas drilling and, increasing­ly, the climate crisis, the researcher­s said that overfishin­g was the primary cause of decline. It has been previously estimated that 100 million sharks are killed by humans every year, overwhelmi­ng their slow reproducti­ve capacity to replenish numbers.

Sharks are often killedunin­tentionall­y by fishers using nets to catch other marine creaturesb­ut are also targeted for purposes such as making shark fin soup, which involves sharks having their fins hacked off before their helpless bodies are discarded back into the ocean.

“Ongoing declines show that we are not protecting a vital part of our ocean ecosystems from overfishin­g, and this will lead to continued decline in the health of our oceans until we do something about it,” said Dr Cassandra Rigby, a biologist at James Cook University in Australia and study co-author.

The research highlights the patchwork quality of fisheries management around the world. Steep declines in shark and ray numbers in the Atlantic Ocean began to stabilize somewhat after 2000 amid conservati­on measures, while the rate of loss has also slowed in the Pacific Ocean. But in the Indian Ocean, shark and ray abundance had plummeted continuall­y since 1970, with an estimated drop of 84% in overall population in this time.

Many species of shark are migratory, meaning their protection requires the cooperatio­n of different countries, while much of the harmful fishing occurs in the largely ungoverned high seas. Previous internatio­nal efforts to stem losses have had limited impact, although overfishin­g is set to be raised at a virtual oceans and climate summit this week featuring John Kerry, the US’s new climate envoy.

Government­s need to enforce “science-based catch limits” on a domestic and regional basis to ensure sharks continue their vital roles as ecosystem predators and protein source for poorer communitie­s, Rigby said. Mariah Pfleger, marine scientist at Oceana, added that countries should also ban the sale and trade of shark fins. The ocean conservati­on group is pushing for the US to adopt such a ban, as Canada enacted in 2019.

“The findings of this paper are horrifying but ultimately not that surprising,” Pfleger said. “We have long known that many species of sharks and rays cannot withstand extensive commercial fishing pressure.”

 ??  ?? A hammerhead shark. Half of the world’s 31 oceanic shark species are now listed as either endangered or critically endangered by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. Photograph: Jorge Silva/Reuters
A hammerhead shark. Half of the world’s 31 oceanic shark species are now listed as either endangered or critically endangered by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. Photograph: Jorge Silva/Reuters

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