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Reversing the decline in shark and ray populations is possible, but requires strong governance and management

Reversing the decline in shark and ray populations is possible, but requires strong governance and management
Credit: AI-generated image ()

The oceans remain vast and inscrutable. While technology has revolutionized our capacity to track threats to biodiversity on land, our understanding of the status of marine biodiversity remains .

. Global marine fish catches continue to be underestimated, with as much as .

The fast decline of shark and ray species globally is representative of many other exploited that lack scientific monitoring and .

and , based on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) criteria, primarily due to overfishing. These species have a key role in marine ecosystem functioning and human food security.

Fortunately, there are signs of hope. New scientific techniques and recent efforts of the scientific community have helped create a more comprehensive picture of the speed and scale of these changes, highlighting successful cases of protection and management efforts, including those in .

Coastal sharks and rays missing in some areas, thrive in others

In 2019, our team of experts carried out IUCN Red List assessments in the Bahamas to determine the global extinction risk status of several sharks and rays.

We found ourselves attempting to reconcile widely divergent views of the regional status of species that were more common in the northwest Atlantic and rare or near absent in the southwest Atlantic.

To understand the reasons for this difference, we gathered data on population status of all 26 coastal sharks and rays—ranging from north to south—across the western Atlantic Ocean, examining the factors like fishing pressure and management effort that could influence the extinction risk status of these species.

We found that . Across the whole region, we saw that although fishing pressure increased extinction risk, the strength of management engagement was widely overlooked, despite it reducing the extinction risk of all 26 wide-ranging sharks and rays.

The bonnethead shark species (Sphyrna tiburo) is an excellent of what is happening in the Western Atlantic region. The species is abundantly found in the northern part of its range. But further south, it hasn't been seen in decades.

So why is this happening?

In the United States, this shark species is managed by catch quota, while in Mexico there is a seasonal fishery quota. The Bahamas has been dubbed a '' because of their ban on commercial shark fishing.

Further south, there is no discernible management and this species is captured in unregulated targeted fisheries and as retained incidental catch. Down south, this species is likely subject to heavy unmanaged fishing pressure in most countries. It is very rarely found in Colombia and has collapsed in Brazil where there are very few recent records.

A road map for shark recovery

The was implemented by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in 1993.

This plan was developed in response to the .

We found that populations in the northwest Atlantic recovered shortly after the implementation of this management plan.

Thirty years after this implementation, we found the stabilization of three populations. We also documented the rebuilding of six of the 11 coastal sharks here.

We believe that this success can be attributed to:

  • A strong regulation system where catch is prohibited for some species (or group of species) and limited for others. A system that improves catch reporting and reduces the pressure of fishing through the reduction of the number of shark-directed fishing permits.
  • strict enforcement by the U.S. Coast Guard and for fishers in U.S. waters
  • continuous monitoring of the fishery for data collection

Recovering species population through collaboration

Our research found that halting and reversing declines and creating sustainable fisheries is possible even for wide-ranging sharks and rays.

But this requires strong governance and management.

Concerted efforts can bridge the spots of successful management and recovery with adjacent nations where the are still in decline, leading to success at a global scale. This approach will ensure that successful conservation in one country is not undone by less regulated fishing areas outside those borders.

Developed nations, that are bringing their fisheries into sustainability and importing more fish, should translate their successes into capacity-building lessons to support other nations undergoing the transition towards sustainability.

Provided by The Conversation

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Citation: Reversing the decline in shark and ray populations is possible, but requires strong governance and management (2023, July 14) retrieved 30 April 2025 from /news/2023-07-reversing-decline-shark-ray-populations.html
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