Skip to content
Notifications
Clear all

Sharks Dwindle As Top Catchers Delay On Conservation Actions

snook hunter's avatar
(@snook-hunter)
Noble Member Registered

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- A decade after members of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (UN FAO) approved an international plan to conserve sharks, a new analysis finds that it has yet to be fully implemented. With 30 percent of all shark species now threatened or near threatened with extinction, there is little evidence that the plan has contributed significantly to improved conservation and management of these animals.

The analysis, The Future of Sharks: A Review of Action and Inaction, uses fisheries information provided to the UN FAO to identify the top 20 shark-catching countries and other entities, and then assesses whether they have taken the management and conservation measures they agreed to in 2001. According to the review, only 13 of the top 20 have developed national plans of action to protect sharks—one of the primary recommendations from 2001—and it remains unclear how those plans have been implemented or if they have been effective.

The top 20 shark catchers account for more than 640,000 tonnes annually, nearly 80 percent of the total shark catch reported globally. The top 10, in order, are: Indonesia, India, Spain, Taiwan, Argentina, Mexico, Pakistan, United States, Japan, and Malaysia. Indonesia, India, Spain and Taiwan account for more than 35 percent of all sharks taken annually, based on their own reported data.

Worldwide, shark populations are in decline due to unregulated fishing, much of it to meet the high demand for fins. Up to 73 million are killed annually primarily for their fins, which are used as an ingredient in shark fin soup, a popular dish in many East Asian countries.

The analysis, produced by TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network, and the Pew Environment Group, was released ahead of a crucial meeting of the UN FAO's Committee on Fisheries (COFI), taking place 31 January through 4 February in Rome, Italy. The two organizations recommend that COFI perform "a comprehensive review into the actions being undertaken to manage fisheries in which sharks are taken."

"The fate of the world's sharks is in the hands of the Top 20 shark catchers, most of which have failed to demonstrate what, if anything, they are doing to save these imperiled species. They need to take action to stop the decline in shark populations and help ensure that the list of species threatened by overfishing does not continue to grow," said Glenn Sant, TRAFFIC's Global Marine Programme Leader.

"Sharks play a critical role in the ocean environment. Where shark populations are healthy, marine life thrives; but where they have been overfished, ecosystems fall out of balance. Shark-catching countries and entities must stand by their commitments and act now to conserve and protect these animals," said Jill Hepp, Global Shark Conservation manager for the Pew Environment Group.


TEAM GETCHA GETCHA SHARKON

Quote
Topic starter Posted : 01/28/2011 8:23 am
kanemano's avatar
(@kanemano)
New Member Registered

So thier sayin the US is higher on the list than the Japanese??? I don't think that data
is very acurate or were reporting true #s and maybe not so much the other guys. Either way that needs to be addressed. Of course rather than impose limits on commercial sectors we'll just be banned from fishing. That way we can tell the rest of the world that were doing our part by eliminating the rec fishermen "who really do all the damage". I'm 53 and never had a frickin bowl of fin soup. Then again I've never had any of that coffee made from the crap of some bird or animal that eats coffee beans. Supposed to be the best in the world.....think I'll pass dude.........


ReplyQuote
Posted : 01/28/2011 1:47 pm