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Executive
Summary -
Sharks and Their Relatives: Ecology and Conservation - Occasional Paper of the IUCN Species Survival Commission
No. 20
Sharks and their relatives
the rays and chimaeras are the diverse group
of cartilaginous fishes (Class Chondrichthyes) that
have evolved over 400 million years. Historically considered
of low economic value to large-scale fisheries (and
therefore neglected by fishery management agencies),
today many of these fishes have become the target of
directed commercial and recreational fisheries around
the world, and are increasingly taken in the bycatch
of fisheries targeting other species. Unfortunately,
most sharks and their relatives are characterised by
K-selected life history traits, including slow growth,
late sexual maturity, low fecundity and long life, resulting
in low rates of population increase. Such life histories
make these species highly vulnerable to overexploitation
and slow to recover once their populations have been
depleted.
Shark fisheries have expanded
in size and number around the world since the mid-1980s,
primarily in response to the rapidly increasing demand
for shark fins, meat and cartilage. Despite the boom-and-bust
nature of virtually all shark fisheries over the past
century, most shark fisheries today still lack monitoring
or management. For example, only a handful of the 125
countries that are now involved in shark fishing and
international trade have even the most minimal management
in place, and there is still no management for sharks
fished on the high seas. As a result, many shark populations
are now depleted and some are considered threatened.
Shark fishery management has
been hampered by a lack of biological and fishery data.
Growing international concern over the status of these
species, however, has improved this situation in recent
years. This report emphasises the widely acknowledged
need to improve shark fishery monitoring, expand biological
research and take management action. Yet while species-specific
data are still needed, lack of information should not
be used to justify the lack of management for these
vulnerable animals. If any marine species demand precautionary
management, as set out by the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) Precautionary Approach
(1995), it is the sharks and their relatives, because
of their well-documented vulnerability to overexploitation.
This report serves as an introduction
to the ecology, status and conservation of the sharks
and their relatives for a general audience. It draws
attention to their unique biology and makes the case
for expanded political and financial investment in research,
monitoring and precautionary management for all fisheries
taking sharks, skates, rays and chimaeras as part of
their catch. Shark fisheries cannot be managed sustainably,
nor shark populations remain viable, in the absence
of new conservation and management initiatives.
ISBN: 2-8317-0460-X
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