The following text was published by Dr. Gerry
Goeden in the Epoch Times out of Singapore on March 15, 2013.
I
had been underwater now for about two hours and the cold was setting in. I was
being towed behind a small boat 150 km from shore and counting reef fish as
part of my underwater surveys on the Great Barrier Reef. On one side of me the
water was about 10 metres deep, bright and colorful with coral and fish and
then it plunged down to nearly 1000 metres of icy darkness just beneath me.
I’d had company since I first dived into the inky water. Just on the edge
of my visibility a pair of Oceanic Whitetip Sharks, Carcharhinus longimanus, had followed my every move. Famed oceanographer,
Jacques Cousteau described them as "the most dangerous of all sharks"
and his words echoed in my mind.
All I could see of them was the silvery tips of their huge pectoral fins. Growing to four metres and 170 kg and considered to be responsible for most open ocean shark attacks, these elegant fish are nature’s ultimate predator and were my biggest worry.
That was 30 years ago and Oceanic Whitetips were always around me. The
last time I dived the outer Barrier I was alone. In 1969, Lineaweaver and
Backus wrote of the Oceanic Whitetip: "[it is] extraordinarily abundant,
perhaps the most abundant large animal, large being over 100 pounds
[45 kg], on the face of the earth". Now overfishing has brought about a catastrophic
collapse in their numbers. The International Union for the Conservation of Nature lists them as
“Critically Endangered” in the Northwest and Central
Atlantic and “Vulnerable” globally.
But the Oceanic White Tips are not alone in this
tragedy. "There is mounting evidence of
widespread and ongoing declines in the abundance of shark populations
worldwide, coincident with marked rises in global shark catches in the last
half-century," say Mizue Hisano, Professor Sean Connolly and Dr William
Robbins from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook
University .
"Overfishing of sharks is now
recognized as a major global conservation concern, with increasing numbers of
shark species added to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's
list of threatened species," they say in the latest issue of the science
journal PLos ONE .
Interest is growing worldwide in
protecting these sharks. Now more species have been added to Appendix II of the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
(CITES). This happened during the Conference of Parties meeting in Bangkok,
Thailand, March 3-14 of this year. Sadly, the nations of the world were voting
on the restriction of international trade only in endangered sharks. This may
not be enough as the fishery will quickly shift to other less desirable species
to meet its growing demands.
Shark meat is low priced so fishermen try to fill their boats with
only the valuable fins. Contrary to a UN Resolution to ban the practice, the
fins are usually sliced off the shark while it is still alive. The cheaper body
is thrown back into the ocean and the shark, unable to swim, dies slowly. Shark
fin purchases are increasing at the rate of five percent per year in mainland China .
Globally, catches have more than tripled in the last 50 years even though
sharks are becoming harder to catch as their numbers fall.
Dr. Shelley Clarke’s estimate
of sharks harvested for their valuable fins is between 26 million and as many
as 73 million sharks each year worldwide. Her best estimate is 38 million
sharks killed annually.
This number is an astonishing three to four times
higher than is reported by world markets to the United Nations (FAO).
Scientists from the International Union for the Conservation of
Nature (IUCN) are shocked to find that more than half of many large shark
species have virtually disappeared in the last 30 years. The collapse in shark
numbers is due to the unprecedented demand for shark fins. Each hour about 5000
sharks have their fins sliced off and their bodies thrown into the sea. At
current rates of decline, there will be no shark fins and unfortunately very
few sharks by 2030.
Will the CITES Conference in Bangkok
be able to protect the Oceanic Whitetip? I’m not so sure.
A
research team, which included researchers from Microwave Telemetry, Inc., the
Cape Eleuthera Institute, and the Institute for Ocean Conservation Science at Stony Brook
University , attached
satellite tags to mature oceanic Whitetip sharks in The Bahamas. The tags
recorded depth, temperature, and location for pre-programmed periods of time.
At the end of the time period the tags self-detached from the sharks and
reported their data to orbiting satellites.
Their findings, published February 20, 2013 in the journal PLoS ONE , show that some of these sharks roamed
nearly 2,000 kilometers from the spot where they were caught, but all
individuals returned to The Bahamas within a few months.
Protecting endangered Whitetips in
signatory countries will have little effect if they travel into unprotected
seas. Of the eight tagged Oceanic Whitetip sharks tracked for more than a
month, three stayed within the Bahamas Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). The other
five sharks made long-distance movements outside of the EEZ with one traveling
as far as Bermuda .
So why are shark fins attracting such attention?
Shark fin soup is a delicacy served at Chinese weddings and other
celebrations for centuries (since Ming Dynasty). Recently this expensive
product has become part of business dinners in Southeast
Asia . Because the fins are the most expensive part of the shark,
having them on the menu is a sign of prosperity.
Oceanic Whitetips belong to an ancient group of fish and produce
from one to 15 pups after a year’s gestation. They are unable to produce enough
pups to balance the high fishing rates and so the number of sharks gets smaller
each year. But the Oceanic Whitetip is at the top of the food chain and its
abundance regulates the ecological relationships of all the marine life in the
complex web of predator and prey beneath them.
Within 30 years shark fin
soup will no longer symbolize prosperity. Instead it will be a tribute to man’s
greed and lack of commitment to his own future.
Photo by Heinrichs
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