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      Bycatch governance and best practice mitigation technology in global tuna fisheries

      Marine Policy
      Elsevier BV

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          Fishing down marine food webs

          The mean trophic level of the species groups reported in Food and Agricultural Organization global fisheries statistics declined from 1950 to 1994. This reflects a gradual transition in landings from long-lived, high trophic level, piscivorous bottom fish toward short-lived, low trophic level invertebrates and planktivorous pelagic fish. This effect, also found to be occurring in inland fisheries, is most pronounced in the Northern Hemisphere. Fishing down food webs (that is, at lower trophic levels) leads at first to increasing catches, then to a phase transition associated with stagnating or declining catches. These results indicate that present exploitation patterns are unsustainable.
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            Trophic cascades revealed in diverse ecosystems

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              Global estimates of shark catches using trade records from commercial markets.

              Despite growing concerns about overexploitation of sharks, lack of accurate, species-specific harvest data often hampers quantitative stock assessment. In such cases, trade studies can provide insights into exploitation unavailable from traditional monitoring. We applied Bayesian statistical methods to trade data in combination with genetic identification to estimate by species, the annual number of globally traded shark fins, the most commercially valuable product from a group of species often unrecorded in harvest statistics. Our results provide the first fishery-independent estimate of the scale of shark catches worldwide and indicate that shark biomass in the fin trade is three to four times higher than shark catch figures reported in the only global data base. Comparison of our estimates to approximated stock assessment reference points for one of the most commonly traded species, blue shark, suggests that current trade volumes in numbers of sharks are close to or possibly exceeding the maximum sustainable yield levels.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Marine Policy
                Marine Policy
                Elsevier BV
                0308597X
                September 2011
                September 2011
                : 35
                : 5
                : 590-609
                Article
                10.1016/j.marpol.2011.01.021
                5da7082b-b2d2-40cb-809a-ad644c1d2abd
                © 2011

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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