Threatening the endangered: Uncovering endangered elasmobranchs and factors perpetuating the Tanzanian shark-fin trade

IF 1.1 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q4 ECOLOGY African Journal of Ecology Pub Date : 2024-05-02 DOI:10.1111/aje.13275
Cyrus Rumisha, Deusdedith Barongo, Jackson L. Saiperaki, Silvia F. Materu, Robinson H. Mdegela
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Abstract

Despite global conservation efforts, elasmobranchs still face increased fishing pressure due to high demand for their products. Although certain species have been afforded international and local protection, the high value of their products in international markets incentivises the trade of protected species covertly within marketed fish products. To address the problem, we amplified fragments of the cytochrome oxidase subunit I gene (approximately 595 base pairs) from 164 elasmobranch fins collected from fish markets in Tanzania to test whether protected species and those of conservation concern are among these specimens. Similarly, we conducted 130 in-depth key informant interviews with stakeholders involved in the elasmobranch-fin trade to gather diverse perspectives on the factors perpetuating the trade. Our findings revealed fifteen elasmobranch species, with requiem sharks (Carcharhinidae) and wedgefishes (Rhinidae) accounting for 44.1% and 33.8% of the fins, respectively. Alarmingly, over 70% of the traded fins originated from threatened elasmobranchs, with 36.8% sourced from critically endangered species. Unexpectedly, almost 9% of the traded fins were sourced from two nationally protected species, Carcharhinus longimanus and Alopias pelagicus, highlighting the existence of regulatory gaps that require immediate attention. Similarly, 91.2% of traded fins were sourced from CITES-listed species, emphasising the severity of the problem. The interviews highlighted technological challenges in tracking the trade, limited awareness of trade impacts on elasmobranch sustainability, scarce surveillance resources, inadequate training to identify routes and offenders and lack of public support as the main factors perpetuating the trade. Addressing these issues necessitates a total ban on elasmobranch-fin trade, coupled with increased funding for enforcement agencies, providing specialised training for law enforcement personnel, launching public awareness campaigns and promoting community-based monitoring and collaboration with international organisations. By doing so, Tanzania can effectively safeguard the sustainability of threatened elasmobranchs and advance global conservation efforts for these fishes.

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威胁濒危物种:发现濒危鳍鳃类动物和使坦桑尼亚鲨鱼鳍贸易永久化的因素
尽管全球都在努力保护鳞鳃类动物,但由于对其产品的高需求,它们仍然面临着越来越大的捕捞压力。尽管某些物种已受到国际和地方保护,但其产品在国际市场上的高价值刺激了受保护物种在市场鱼类产品中的隐蔽贸易。为了解决这个问题,我们扩增了从坦桑尼亚鱼类市场收集的 164 个韧皮动物鳍片中的细胞色素氧化酶亚基 I 基因片段(约 595 个碱基对),以检测这些标本中是否有受保护物种和受保护物种。同样,我们还对参与鳍蝠鲼贸易的利益相关者进行了 130 次深入的关键信息提供者访谈,以收集他们对导致鳍蝠鲼贸易长期存在的因素的不同看法。我们的调查结果显示,有 15 个鳍鳃类物种的鱼鳍被贸易商收购,其中安息鲨(Carcharhinidae)和楔鱼(Rhinidae)分别占 44.1% 和 33.8%。令人担忧的是,超过 70% 的交易鱼鳍来自濒危鳍鳃类动物,其中 36.8% 来自极度濒危物种。令人意想不到的是,将近 9% 的贸易鱼鳍来自两个国家级保护物种:长吻胭脂鱼(Carcharhinus longimanus)和海鲈(Alopias pelagicus)。同样,91.2%的贸易鱼鳍来自《濒危野生动植物种国际贸易公约》(CITES)中列出的物种,凸显了问题的严重性。访谈中强调,跟踪贸易所面临的技术挑战、对贸易对麋鹿鳍蝠鲼可持续发展的影响认识不足、监控资源稀缺、识别贸易路线和违法者的培训不足以及缺乏公众支持是导致贸易长期存在的主要因素。要解决这些问题,就必须全面禁止鳍蝠鲼贸易,同时增加对执法机构的资金投入,为执法人员提供专门培训,开展提高公众认识的活动,促进社区监督以及与国际组织的合作。通过这些措施,坦桑尼亚可以有效地保护濒危鞘鳃类鱼类的可持续性,并推动全球保护这些鱼类的努力。
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来源期刊
African Journal of Ecology
African Journal of Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
10.00%
发文量
134
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: African Journal of Ecology (formerly East African Wildlife Journal) publishes original scientific research into the ecology and conservation of the animals and plants of Africa. It has a wide circulation both within and outside Africa and is the foremost research journal on the ecology of the continent. In addition to original articles, the Journal publishes comprehensive reviews on topical subjects and brief communications of preliminary results.
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