Abstract
Sharks and other chondrichthyans are often described as long lived, slow
growing and producing few offspring. These biological characteristics,
together with the common assumption that recruitment is directly related to
stock, and pessimistic stock prognoses obtained from application of
demographic analysis, have led to doubts that sharks can be harvested
sustainably. Developed over the past 40 or so years from studies of only a few
shark species, these doubts have been reinforced by declining catch rates in
industrial, artisanal and recreational fisheries and in fishing programmes
designed to reduce the risk of sharks attacking humans at bathing beaches.
However, more recent studies and application of modelling techniques allowing
for density-dependent responses to the effects of stock reduction indicate
that shark stocks can be harvested sustainably and, if carefully managed, can
provide very stable fisheries. It is now understood that some species (such as
Galeorhinus galeus,
Carcharhinus plumbeus,
Carcharodon carcharias and several species of dogfish)
have low productivity, whereas other species (such as
Mustelus antarcticus,
Rhizoprionodon terraenovae,
Sphyrna tiburo and
Prionace glauca) have higher productivity. This paper
reviews the use of shark products, the effects of fishing on shark populations
of the world, and recent developments in assessment of shark fishery stocks.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
286 articles.
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