Journal Article10.1111/J.1461-0248.2010.01489.X
Patterns and ecosystem consequences of shark declines in the ocean.
TL;DR: It is shown that the high natural diversity and abundance of sharks is vulnerable to even light fishing pressure, and that large sharks can exert strong top-down forces with the potential to shape marine communities over large spatial and temporal scales.
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Abstract: Whereas many land predators disappeared before their ecological roles were studied, the decline of marine apex predators is still unfolding. Large sharks in particular have experienced rapid declines over the last decades. In this study, we review the documented changes in exploited elasmobranch communities in coastal, demersal, and pelagic habitats, and synthesize the effects of sharks on their prey and wider communities. We show that the high natural diversity and abundance of sharks is vulnerable to even light fishing pressure. The decline of large predatory sharks reduces natural mortality in a range of prey, contributing to changes in abundance, distribution, and behaviour of small elasmobranchs, marine mammals, and sea turtles that have few other predators. Through direct predation and behavioural modifications, top-down effects of sharks have led to cascading changes in some coastal ecosystems. In demersal and pelagic communities, there is increasing evidence of mesopredator release, but cascading effects are more hypothetical. Here, fishing pressure on mesopredators may mask or even reverse some ecosystem effects. In conclusion, large sharks can exert strong top-down forces with the potential to shape marine communities over large spatial and temporal scales. Yet more empirical evidence is needed to test the generality of these effects throughout the ocean.
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Citations
Baited remote underwater video system (BRUVs) survey of chondrichthyan diversity in False Bay, South Africa
TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted a survey of the relative abundance, diversity and seasonal distribution of chondrichthyans in False Bay, in south-west South Africa, and found that diversity was greatest in summer, on reefs and in shallow water.
Long-term trajectory of some elasmobranch species off the Tuscany coasts (NW Mediterranean) from 50 years of catch data
TL;DR: In this paper, a time series of elasmobranch catch rates off the Tuscany coasts (NW Mediterranean) were investigated by means of min/max auto-correlation factor analysis in order to estimate variations in population abundance and evaluate the influence of environmental and anthropogenic factors.
Diel and seasonal variation in the use of a nearshore sandflat by a ray community in a near pristine system
TL;DR: Analysis of coarse-scale diel and seasonal movements of elasmobranch mesopredators on a shallow sandflat in Shark Bay, Western Australia suggests that rays have the potential to be a structuring force on this system and that focusing on nearshore habitats is important for managing subtropical ray populations.
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Trends in sightings and population structure of white sharks, Carcharodon carcharias, at Seal Island, False Bay, South Africa, and the emigration of subadult female sharks approaching maturity
TL;DR: The emigration of subadult female sharks approaching maturity from Seal Island, combined with the small number of mature sharks of both sexes reported from any South African location, indicate that adult aggregation sites, and thus areas of reproductive importance, still remain unknown.
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Energy metabolism in mobile, wild-sampled sharks inferred by plasma lipids.
TL;DR: Concentrations of plasma lipids in four large, free-ranging shark species via non-lethal biopsies are evaluated for the purposes of improving understanding of their nutritional ecology and for assessing the utility ofBiopsies in future monitoring studies of the energetics and metabolism in shark populations.
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Ransom A. Myers,Boris Worm +1 more
TL;DR: The analysis suggests that management based on recent data alone may be misleading, and provides minimum estimates for unexploited communities, which could serve as the 'missing baseline' needed for future restoration efforts.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of fishing on benthic fauna, habitat, diversity, community structure and trophic interactions in tropical, temperate and polar marine environments and consider whether it is possible to predict or manage fishing-induced changes in marine ecosystems.
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