Brad Wetherbee and his research team have been
capturing and tracking the movements of mako sharks since 2004, and more than
25 percent of those affixed with satellite transmitters have been caught and
killed by commercial or recreational fishermen.
That mortality rate is more than 10
times the rate estimated by the international body responsible for managing the
world’s mako shark fishery and far higher than is sustainable.
Wetherbee, a shark researcher at the University of Rhode Island, along with Mike Byrne
and other colleagues at the
Guy Harvey Research Institute at Nova Southeastern University, published a
paper in last week’s edition of the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B
documenting the mortality of the sharks they have been monitoring. They hope it
will influence the fishery managers to take steps to reduce the catch of mako
sharks.
Tagged mako shark (Photo by George Schellenger) |
““Makos are caught in all kinds of
fisheries all around the world – gill netters, long liners, commercial,
recreational,” he said. “They’re the shark everyone wants to catch because
they’re good to eat – like a shark version of swordfish. But if our results are
anything close to the true mortality rate, then they’re in trouble.”
Wetherbee admits that his results
may not be reflective of the mortality the sharks face everywhere, and he said
that there are some people who think that makos are being fished sustainably.
But he also believes it would be irresponsible not to report the mortality rate
of his study specimens.
“The fishery managers are faced with
a lack of data about mako mortality,” Wetherbee said. “But based on our
experience, the sharks are being killed at a much higher rate than they’re
estimating, which means overfishing is probably occurring.”
Wetherbee and his colleagues tag as
many as 20 mako sharks each year – though some years they catch far fewer – off
the coast of the mid-Atlantic states, the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico, and
Rhode Island. Each one is affixed with an electronic tag that provides data for
approximately one year about the daily movements of the sharks.
“So we know where they are in
near-real time,” he said. “When they’re caught, we can follow them right to
shore to someone’s dock or their house.
We were surprised how often that was happening.”
His tagged sharks have been caught
and killed by fishermen in the waters off Canada, Cuba, Mexico, Portugal, New
Zealand and throughout the East Coast of the United States.
Last summer, Wetherbee made a public plea to fishermen in southern New England when one of his tagged sharks was
tracked to local waters just as a number of shark fishing tournaments were
scheduled. He asked anyone catching a mako shark with a satellite tag to
release the animal unharmed. The shark survived the tournament season but was
killed by fishermen off North Carolina a few months later.
Wetherbee said that those
responsible for managing the mako shark fishery are expected to issue an
updated stock assessment this fall, and he expects they will take into
consideration the results of his research. He also hopes that new policies will
be proposed to reduce the number of mako sharks caught in the commercial and
recreational fisheries.
“I’m not sure what they’ll do, but I
hope they at least recognize that however they’re currently keeping track of
mako shark mortality doesn’t appear to be very accurate,” he said. “Our data
should help them get a better idea of what’s going on and give them more
information to manage the population.”
Wetherbee and his colleagues also
believe that the use of satellite tracking data for estimating shark mortality
is a novel methodology that may be useful in other fisheries.
“Using electronic tags to learn the
fate of individuals in a fishery is a pretty new way of estimating mortality,”
said Mahmood Shivji, director of the Guy Harvey Research Institute. “But
there’s no mistaking when a tag is reporting from shore that the shark is dead.
It’s a known fate, as opposed to the estimates currently used. There’s promise
for researchers to use the same technology on other species for estimating
mortality.”
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