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Small sharks, big problems: DNA analysis of small fins reveals trade regulation gaps and burgeoning trade in juvenile sharks

Diego Cardeñosa, Elizabeth A. Babcock, Stanley K. H. Shea, Huarong Zhang, Kevin A. Feldheim, Stephan W. Gale, DeEtta Mills, Demian D. Chapman

2024Science Advances13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Many shark species have been overexploited for international markets, including fins for shark fin soup in Southeast Asia. Previous studies highlighted the value of large, threatened shark species, regulated under CITES Appendix II. However, sampling biases may have overlooked small shark species. Here, we address this by identifying species from ~4000 small shark fins in Hong Kong. These fins included species not recorded in previous surveys, raising the market's species diversity to 106. Nearly 75% of the small fins came from small shark species and 58.1% of small species were threatened with extinction. We identified an important CITES listing gap: Trade in 19 small, threatened species, especially from the family Triakidae, is unregulated. In addition, a quarter of small fins come from large sharks, indicating that substantial exploitation of juveniles is occurring and may be affecting fisheries sustainability. Enhanced surveillance of small shark fin trade is essential to ensure effective conservation under emerging trade regulations.

Topics & Concepts

Threatened speciesCITESFisheryExtinction (optical mineralogy)SustainabilityBiologyGeographyEcologyHabitatPaleontologyIchthyology and Marine BiologyFish Ecology and Management StudiesFish Biology and Ecology Studies
Small sharks, big problems: DNA analysis of small fins reveals trade regulation gaps and burgeoning trade in juvenile sharks | Litcius