4.8 Article

Seventy years of tunas, billfishes, and sharks as sentinels of global ocean health

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 378, Issue 6620, Pages 617-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.abj0211

Keywords

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Funding

  1. People Programme (Marie Curie Actions) of the European Union [628116]
  2. La Caixa Foundation [100010434]
  3. La Caixa fellowship [LCF/BQ/PR20/11770005]
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  5. Canada Research Chairs Program

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This study uses iconic and well-studied fish species to calculate yearly changes in extinction risk and track progress towards global sustainability and biodiversity targets. The study finds that the biodiversity loss curve has shifted for certain fish species with effective fisheries management, but continues to worsen for sharks which are undermanaged.
Fishing activity is closely monitored to an increasing degree, but its effects on biodiversity have not received such attention. Using iconic and well-studied fish species such as tunas, billfishes, and sharks, we calculate a continuous Red List Index of yearly changes in extinction risk over 70 years to track progress toward global sustainability and biodiversity targets. We show that this well-established biodiversity indicator is highly sensitive and responsive to fishing mortality. After similar to 58 years of increasing risk of extinction, effective fisheries management has shifted the biodiversity loss curve for tunas and billfishes, whereas the curve continues to worsen for sharks, which are highly undermanaged. While populations of highly valuable commercial species are being rebuilt, the next management challenge is to halt and reverse the harm afflicted by these same fisheries to broad oceanic biodiversity.

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