Sharks, rays and chimeras (class Chondrichthyes; herein ‘sharks’) today face possibly the largest crisis of their 420 million year history. Tens of millions of sharks are caught and traded internationally each year, many populations are overfished to the point where global catch peaked in 2003, and a quarter of species have an elevated risk of extinction [1, 2, 3]. To some, the solution is to simply stop taking them from our oceans, or prohibit carriage, sale or trade in shark fins [4. Approaches such as bans and alternative livelihoods for fishers (e.g. ecotourism) may play some role in controlling fishing mortality but will not solve this crisis because sharks are mostly taken as incidental catch and play an important role in food securit...
consumption of seafood, combined with the compounding effects of habitat loss, climate change, and p...
The rapid expansion of human activities threatens ocean-wide biodiversity. Numerous marine animal po...
Overfishing is the primary cause of marine defaunation, yet declines in and increasing extinction ri...
Sharks, rays and chimeras (class Chondrichthyes; herein ‘sharks’) today face possibly the largest cr...
Sharks, rays, and chimaeras (Class Chondrichthyes; herein 'sharks') are the earliest extant jawed ve...
Human actions are causing pervasive declines in biodiversity and ecosystem services. Sharks, rays an...
1. Fishing spans all oceans and the impact on ocean predators such as sharks and rays is largely unk...
Shark populations throughout the world are at grave risk; some spe-cies have declined by 95 percent....
Sharks and their cartilaginous relatives (Class Chondrichthyes, herein ‘sharks’) are one of the worl...
Sharks are the essential keystone predators of global marine habitats and have helped maintain the h...
Marine biodiversity worldwide is under increasing threat, primarily as a result of over-harvesting, ...
Shark and ray populations are crucial to a healthy oceanic ecosystem, but regulation of harm is diff...
To date, there is a widespread decline in Chondrichthyan species (sharks, rays, and chimeras) in vir...
The rapid expansion of human activities threatens ocean-wide biodiversity. Numerous marine animal po...
Over the last two decades, sharks have been increasingly recognized among the world’s most threatene...
consumption of seafood, combined with the compounding effects of habitat loss, climate change, and p...
The rapid expansion of human activities threatens ocean-wide biodiversity. Numerous marine animal po...
Overfishing is the primary cause of marine defaunation, yet declines in and increasing extinction ri...
Sharks, rays and chimeras (class Chondrichthyes; herein ‘sharks’) today face possibly the largest cr...
Sharks, rays, and chimaeras (Class Chondrichthyes; herein 'sharks') are the earliest extant jawed ve...
Human actions are causing pervasive declines in biodiversity and ecosystem services. Sharks, rays an...
1. Fishing spans all oceans and the impact on ocean predators such as sharks and rays is largely unk...
Shark populations throughout the world are at grave risk; some spe-cies have declined by 95 percent....
Sharks and their cartilaginous relatives (Class Chondrichthyes, herein ‘sharks’) are one of the worl...
Sharks are the essential keystone predators of global marine habitats and have helped maintain the h...
Marine biodiversity worldwide is under increasing threat, primarily as a result of over-harvesting, ...
Shark and ray populations are crucial to a healthy oceanic ecosystem, but regulation of harm is diff...
To date, there is a widespread decline in Chondrichthyan species (sharks, rays, and chimeras) in vir...
The rapid expansion of human activities threatens ocean-wide biodiversity. Numerous marine animal po...
Over the last two decades, sharks have been increasingly recognized among the world’s most threatene...
consumption of seafood, combined with the compounding effects of habitat loss, climate change, and p...
The rapid expansion of human activities threatens ocean-wide biodiversity. Numerous marine animal po...
Overfishing is the primary cause of marine defaunation, yet declines in and increasing extinction ri...