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Press
Release May 08 From IUCN. Read full report by clicking the title:
"You
can swim but you cant hide more oceanic sharks on the
IUCN Red List"
The increasing demand for the delicacy shark fin soup,
driven by rapidly growing Asian economies, means that often the
valuable shark fins are retained and the carcasses discarded. Frequently,
discarded sharks and rays are not even recorded.
Sharks
and rays are particularly vulnerable to overfishing due to their
tendency to take many years to become sexually mature and have relatively
few offspring.
The
traditional view of oceanic sharks and rays as fast and powerful
too often leads to a misperception that they are resilient to fishing
pressure, says Sonja Fordham, Deputy Chair of the IUCN SSC
Shark Specialist Group (SSG). Despite mounting evidence of
decline and increasing threats to these species, there are no international
catch limits for oceanic sharks. Our research shows that action
is urgently needed on a global level if these fisheries are to be
sustainable.
Visit
the IUCN's website to see the complete chart of "Red Listed"
species.

IUCN - International Union for Conservation of Nature - is the worlds
oldest and largest global environmental network. They help the world
find pragmatic solutions to our most pressing environment and development
challenges by supporting scientific research; managing field projects
all over the world; and bringing governments, NGOs, the UN, international
conventions and
companies together to develop policy, laws and best practice.
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For
most people the problems are out of sight, so out of mind, but not
for sea kayakers like our Forum's UK Simon who
participated in a shark tag & release program in 2007 funded
by the World Wildlife Fund. He shares here some photos and comments.
Some
small sharks coming aboard (picture left) - we don't kill or injure
the sharks, we catch them as part of the World Wildlife Funds (WWF)
conservation program - so they have to be played to the kayak still
fit enough to be able to endure the stress of measuring (we can't
accurately weigh them in the kayaks) and tagging and still be strong
enough to be released successfully. A chinagraph pencil on a divers
slate holds the info - then this is transferred to the tagging cards
back on dry land.

The bigger sharks take some handling. Bude
is the target area for our tagging campaign for several reasons
- it is on the north coast of Cornwall, so in the lee from the prevailing
Southwest winds. There is plenty of accommodation and a nice general
area - but more importantly, the sharks are within a couple of miles
of launch! They generally run around the 250lb - 400lb mark early
and late, in the middle of the summer the youngsters are about -
80lbs - 150lbs is more like it, and it would be very rare to run
into a big one during this period. So end of July/August is the
timing.
However, this year we had a longliner move into the bay and he has
caught over 100 large porbeagles to his boat alone.....absolutely
destroying the breeding stock. Porgies are VERY slow growing and
they are on the red list too - if the fishing for them doesn't stop
they will be fished out within 10 years.
Blue
sharks are also very rare over here now, certainly on the channel
coast. We used to get 10 or more runs a day from my Dad's charter
boat in the 70s - now you would be lucky to get a couple on a good
day. Again, they have been fished out, mostly by the French who
are trawling them as pelagics, along with many hundreds, if not
thousands, of dolphins and porpoises.
A
shame that nothing ever came of fishing restrictions proposed this
past December. The Government over here is spineless and has just
given in to commercial pressure TO NOT RAISE the bass minimum landing
size to 40cm (15 or 16 inches? - about 2lbs) from its current 36cm
(12-14 inches and just over 1lb) at which size NONE OF THE BASS
HAVE SPAWNED - it is absolute madness. The fisheries regulations
are a total mess and not enforced, for fear of adverse publicity.........work
that one out. Simon is paddling the
sit-on-top Kaskazi
Dorado Kayak - Read his review
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