Litcius/Paper detail

Ecological roles and importance of sharks in the Anthropocene Ocean

Simon Dedman, Jerry Moxley, Yannis P. Papastamatiou, Matías Braccini, Jennifer E. Caselle, Demian D. Chapman, Joshua E. Cinner, Erin Dillon, Nicholas K. Dulvy, Ruth E. Dunn, Mario Espinoza, Alastair R. Harborne, Euan S. Harvey, Michelle R. Heupel, Charlie Huveneers, Nicholas A. J. Graham, James T. Ketchum, Natalie V. Klinard, Alison Kock, Christopher G. Lowe, M. Aaron MacNeil, Elizabeth M. P. Madin, Douglas J. McCauley, Mark G. Meekan, Amelia Meier, Colin A. Simpfendorfer, M. Tim Tinker, Megan V. Winton, Aaron J. Wirsing, Michael R. Heithaus

2024Science110 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In ecosystems, sharks can be predators, competitors, facilitators, nutrient transporters, and food. However, overfishing and other threats have greatly reduced shark populations, altering their roles and effects on ecosystems. We review these changes and implications for ecosystem function and management. Macropredatory sharks are often disproportionately affected by humans but can influence prey and coastal ecosystems, including facilitating carbon sequestration. Like terrestrial predators, sharks may be crucial to ecosystem functioning under climate change. However, large ecosystem effects of sharks are not ubiquitous. Increasing human uses of oceans are changing shark roles, necessitating management consideration. Rebuilding key populations and incorporating shark ecological roles, including less obvious ones, into management efforts are critical for retaining sharks' functional value. Coupled social-ecological frameworks can facilitate these efforts.

Topics & Concepts

OverfishingEcosystemMarine ecosystemPredationEcologyAnthropoceneKeystone speciesEcosystem-based managementApex predatorEcosystem engineerBiologyFishingIchthyology and Marine BiologyMarine and fisheries researchFish Ecology and Management Studies