Carcharhinid sharks can make up a large fraction of the top predators inhabiting tropical marine ecosystems and have declined in many regions due to intense fishing pressure. There is some support for the hypothesis that carcharhinid species that complete their life-cycle within coral reef ecosystems, hereafter referred to as "reef sharks", are more abundant inside no-take marine reserves due to a reduction in fishing pressure (i.e., they benefit from marine reserves). Key predictions of this hypothesis are that (a) individual reef sharks exhibit high site-fidelity to these protected areas and (b) their relative abundance will generally be higher in these areas compared to fished reefs. To test this hypothesis for the first time in Caribbea...
Coastal habitats provide important functions for many species and may serve as nursery grounds for t...
1. Reef sharks are declining worldwide under ever increasing fishing pressure with potential consequ...
Despite the ecological and economic importance of the Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi), li...
No-take marine protected areas (MPAs) are a commonly applied tool to reduce human fishing impacts on...
Decades of overexploitation have devastated shark populations, leaving considerable doubt as to thei...
1. Reef sharks are declining world-wide under ever-increasing fishing pressure, with potential conse...
We investigated drivers of reef shark demography across a large and isolated marine protected area, ...
Background: In recent decades, large pelagic and coastal shark populations have declined dramaticall...
Reef sharks may influence the foraging behaviour of mesopredatory teleosts on coral reefs via both r...
<div><p>Quantifying shark distribution patterns and species-specific habitat associations in respons...
Quantifying shark distribution patterns and species-specific habitat associations in response to geo...
Scientific monitoring has recorded only a recent fraction of the oceans' alteration history. This bi...
International audienceReef sharks are vulnerable predators experiencing severe population declines m...
Coastal habitats provide important functions for many species and may serve as nursery grounds for t...
1. Reef sharks are declining worldwide under ever increasing fishing pressure with potential consequ...
Despite the ecological and economic importance of the Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi), li...
No-take marine protected areas (MPAs) are a commonly applied tool to reduce human fishing impacts on...
Decades of overexploitation have devastated shark populations, leaving considerable doubt as to thei...
1. Reef sharks are declining world-wide under ever-increasing fishing pressure, with potential conse...
We investigated drivers of reef shark demography across a large and isolated marine protected area, ...
Background: In recent decades, large pelagic and coastal shark populations have declined dramaticall...
Reef sharks may influence the foraging behaviour of mesopredatory teleosts on coral reefs via both r...
<div><p>Quantifying shark distribution patterns and species-specific habitat associations in respons...
Quantifying shark distribution patterns and species-specific habitat associations in response to geo...
Scientific monitoring has recorded only a recent fraction of the oceans' alteration history. This bi...
International audienceReef sharks are vulnerable predators experiencing severe population declines m...
Coastal habitats provide important functions for many species and may serve as nursery grounds for t...
1. Reef sharks are declining worldwide under ever increasing fishing pressure with potential consequ...
Despite the ecological and economic importance of the Caribbean reef shark (Carcharhinus perezi), li...