Future too warm for baby sharks
New research has found as climate change causes the world’s oceans to warm, baby sharks are born smaller, exhausted, undernourished and into environments that are already difficult for them to survi
ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
James Cook University Townsville
Queensland 4811 Australia
Phone: 61 7 4781 4000
Email: info@coralcoe.org.au
Tuna fishers who network with their competition may be able to stop thousands of sharks a year from being accidentally captured and killed in the Pacific Ocean.
Researchers from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University and the University of Hawaii found if fishers communicated more with their rivals, it could lead to more sustainable fishing practices.
“Forty-six thousand sharks could have been saved if information about avoiding sharks was shared freely between fishing groups,” says lead author Michele Barnes.
Barnes interviewed nearly every single Hawaii-based longline tuna fisher and found there were three distinct groups, based on who they shared information with.
“To use the phrase, ‘birds of a feather flock together’, we definitely found that to be the case here – fishers primarily shared information with those most similar to themselves.”
The research team found that these ‘cliques’ prevented communication to come up with strategies to catch fewer sharks and more tuna.
Bycatch, which is the accidental capture of non-target species, is a big global problem. In longline tuna fisheries, where fishers hang thousands of hooks from a mainline stretching up to 45 nautical miles, 100 sharks can be caught on a single line.
“Shark bycatch has significant ecological implications because many species of shark are in sharp decline, but when sharks are accidentally caught there are also economic implications because it takes time for fishers to cut them off the line, they risk losing their gear, and it can be dangerous,” says co-author John Lynham.
“It’s unclear whether fishers are even aware that some groups have learned how to avoid sharks more effectively, so sharing this information with them is the first critical step,” says Barnes.
“Sharks are vital to the health of the oceans, and fishing supports the livelihoods of millions of people across the globe. So when we can find simple, low cost ways to reduce the number of sharks that are accidentally caught, it’s great for fishers, and for the oceans.”
The paper entitled “Social Networks and Environmental Outcomes” has been published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences – bit.ly/27QTHSh
Link: bit.ly/1TgN731 (Images must carry credits as listed in Dropbox folder)
Dr. Michele Barnes, lead author
Visiting Scholar, ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University
NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellow, University of Hawaii
Office: +61-4-4781-6751, mob: +61-4-0867-7570, e-mail: michele.barnes@jcu.edu.au
John Lynham
Associate Professor, Economics Department, University of Hawaii
Currently on sabbatical at Udayana University, Indonesia
tel: +62-812-3897-7836, email: lynham@hawaii.edu
Kylie Simmonds
Communications Manager
ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University
James Cook University, Townsville Queensland 4811 Australia Phone: +61 (0)7 4781 6067, +61 (0)428 785 895 Email: kylie.simmonds1@jcu.edu.au
ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies.
U.S. National Science Foundation.
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ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
James Cook University Townsville
Queensland 4811 Australia
Phone: 61 7 4781 4000
Email: info@coralcoe.org.au