Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAAAS - Most Open-Ocean Shark Species Facing Extinction: "Some Of The Declines Are Staggering"
Shark populations in the high seas have fallen by 71% since 1970, researchers have found. The main cause is overfishing, which has put three-quarters of these species at risk of extinction. Its the first big picture of the decline in sharks, says Nuno Queiroz, a marine ecologist at the Research Center in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources who was not involved with the research. The new global perspective, he says, gives you an idea how pervasive the fishing has been.
Humans have hunted sharks for centuries for their meat and fins. A related group of fish, the rays, are caught for their gills, which are used in traditional Chinese medicine. Studies have identified severe regional declines of specific species, such as the loss of scalloped hammerhead sharks in the northwest Atlantic Ocean, but no one had compiled trends in all oceans.
In the new study, shark experts took a look at 31 species of oceanic sharks and raysall of the species that live in the open ocean. (The group is now analyzing coastal sharks and rays and reef-dwelling species.) With long-term data from fisheries and research surveys, the scientists calculated how populations have changed since 1970, a widely used benchmark.
Some of the declines are staggering, says Nicholas Dulvy, a conservation biologist at Simon Fraser University and co-leader of the effort. Dusky sharks, for example, have dwindled by 72%, the researchers report today in Nature. Only one-third of the 31 species were threatened in 1980, the researchers determined by looking at data from that time. Now, three-quarters are at risk of disappearing. I was just shocked, Dulvy says. It has gotten bad very rapidly in the last decade.
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https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2021/01/most-high-seas-shark-species-now-threatened-extinction?utm_campaign=conservation_olhs_oceans_______&utm_source=twitter_environment&utm_medium=social&utm_content=3rdparty_general____linkcard_&utm_term=___
dameatball
(7,396 posts)On another note, when I use the term "many people" now it seems like a bad memory.
ratchiweenie
(7,754 posts)Mickju
(1,803 posts)I don't think we as a species will ever learn. Do they not realize life on Earth is at stake? The ignorance is staggering.