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Ecological erosion and expanding extinction risk of sharks and rays

journal contribution
posted on 2024-12-16, 23:44 authored by Nicholas K Dulvy, Nathan Pacoureau, Jay H Matsushiba, Helen F Yan, Wade J VanderWright, Cassandra L Rigby, Brittany Finucci, Samantha ShermanSamantha Sherman, Rima W Jabado, John K Carlson, Riley A Pollom, Patricia Charvet, Caroline M Pollock, Craig Hilton-Taylor, Colin A Simpfendorfer
The true state of ocean biodiversity is difficult to assess, and there are few global indicators to track the primary threat of overfishing. We calculated a 50-year Red List Index of extinction risk and ecological function for 1199 sharks and rays and found that since 1970, overfishing has halved their populations and their Red List Index has worsened by 19%. Overfishing the largest species in nearshore and pelagic habitats risks loss of ecomorphotypes and a 5 to 22% erosion of functional diversity. Extinction risk is higher in countries with large human coastal populations but lower in nations with stronger governance, larger economies, and greater beneficial fisheries subsidies. Restricting fishing (including incidental catch) and trade to sustainable levels combined with prohibiting retention of highly threatened species can avert further depletion, widespread loss of population connectivity, and top-down predator control.

History

Journal

Science

Volume

386

Pagination

1-11

Open access

  • No

ISSN

0036-8075

eISSN

1095-9203

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

6726

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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