|

SHARKS A
GLOBAL CONCERN
 THE CANADIAN PRESS
Steve Campana kneels next to a porbeagle shark on the deck of the commercial
fishing boat'On A Mission' while on Georges Bank in early July. The hose in the
mouth is pumping water from the ocean over the shark's gills to keep it alive.
Scientists have discovered a new breeding ground for porbeagle sharks off
Canada's East Coast, giving hope to a species whose numbers have been steadily
slipping around the world. |
Scientists
see hope for porbeagle sharks
ALISON AULD THE CANADIAN
PRESS July 22/08
HALIFAX -
Scientists have discovered a new breeding ground for porbeagle sharks off
Canada's East Coast, giving hope to a species whose numbers have been steadily
slipping around the world. A research team located the
mating area on Georges Bank earlier this month after hearing reports from
fishermen that they were hauling up the large, blue-grey sharks in their nets.
Steve Campana, a marine biologist who specializes in the
species, said the find makes it only the second known breeding ground in the
Northwest Atlantic for the fast, fierce-looking shark that can reach almost
four metres in length. "This is really good news,"
Campana said from his office at the Bedford Institute of Oceanography in
Halifax where he heads the Canadian Shark Research Laboratory.
"To have a second mating ground where they actually seem
to be more abundant is great news ... It is key toward conservation
efforts." Researchers set two lines near the northern
edge of Georges Bank, a rich scallop and groundfish fishing ground almost 500
kilometres from the Nova Scotia coast. Within hours, he said they pulled in 21
sharks - 19 of which were large, mature female porbeagles that weighed 200
kilograms each and were, about two metres long. Campana suspects there might be
hundreds, if not thousands of sharks in the area. Before
returning them to the water, the scientists tagged the fish with satellite
monitors so they can track their movements and identify where they give birth.
Until now, scientists knew of only one breeding ground
for porbeagles off Newfoundland and Labrador's southern coast. The area was
closed to directed shark fishing shortly after it was identified as a mating
area. Campana said Fisheries managers are now reviewing
the latest find to determine whether the area should be closed to shark fishing
to stave off another collapse in the population. "The
discovery of the second mating area which is totally unregulated is of
concern," he said. "Nobody wants to fool around with this
one. We want them to recover and everything we've seen so far indicates they
are, but it's going to take a long time." Patrick Gray of
the Atlantic Shark As sociation said he would recommend to his members that the
newly found area be closed to shark fishing, to help ensure the species is
around in the future. "We're possibly looking at closing
this area on Georges Bank," he said from Sambro, N.S., the base for most of the
province's shark fishermen. "We're not going to be known as the eliminators of
any stock ... Maybe by shutting it down, we can help it rebuild all the
quicker." The porbeagle fishery is worth an estimated $2
million annually on the East Coast, with 90 per cent of it going to markets in
Boston. The porbeagle population reached dangerously low
levels in the mid-1990s, when quotas soared to 1,500 tonnes in the Atlantic
region versus today's catch allowance of 185 tonnes.
"WE WANT THEM TO RECOVER AND
EVERYTHING WE'VE SEEN SO FAR INDICATES THEY ARE, BUT IT'S GOING TO TAKE A
LONG TIME." STEVE CAMPANA
It's
estimated there are about 190,000 porbeagles in Canadian waters - putting the
stock at about one-quarter of its level in 1961 when the fishery first started.
Concerned about the falling numbers, the Committee on the
Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada recommended the porbeagle be designated
as endangered in 2004. The federal government was
encouraged to list it as endangered under the Species At Risk Act, but didn't.
The cold-temperate species, which is related to great
white sharks, is found off New Zealand, the south Atlantic and the east
Atlantic from Iceland to Morocco, and the Mediterranean.
Campana said the stocks in European waters are in serious
decline and much less abundant than in Canadian waters, while populations in
South America and New Zealand waters are relatively healthy because their
catches are small. T he discovery is a rare piece of good
news following a series of shark studies that have found many populations have
plummeted. Recent data showed shark stocks in the Mediterranean had collapsed,
with others in the Atlantic imperilled.
©WebWise
Inc. |