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Shark finning
Shark finning is a practice where sharks are caught, hauled on board, their fins sliced off, and then the finless bodies are tossed overboard, often while still alive. Unable to swim or breathe by keeping in motion, the sharks endure a painful death from suffocation, blood loss, or predation by other species.

Click to view gallery. Warning: gruesome

Why is this happening? Shark fins are a hot commodity. With shark fin soup costing as much as $100 a bowl in Asia, the fins themselves cost up to hundreds of dollars per kilogram. In comparison, shark meat has a relatively low commercial value, netting only $865 per ton. While the fins are like gold, the rest of the shark is not worth the space on the boat to some fishermen.
This is resulting in sharks being killed at wildly unsustainable rates for their fins. In a study of the shark fin trade published in the October 2006 edition of Ecology Letters, it was estimated that the harvest of sharks for their fins is between 26 million and 73 million sharks each year.

“The shark fin trade is notoriously secretive. But we were able to tap into fin auction records and convert from fin sizes and weights to whole shark equivalents to get a good handle on the actual numbers,” says lead author Shelley Clarke, Ph.D, an American fisheries scientist based in Hong Kong and Japan.

If these figures are converted to the weight of the entire shark, the total is three to four times higher than shark catch figures reported to the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO). This suggests that there is a huge shark fin trade that is largely ‘off the books’ of the world’s legal fisheries. Shark finning has become a multi-million dollar industry, with probably a good percentage of it illegal.

There are 17 nations that have outlawed the practice of shark finning and yet the practice continues. Poaching goes on in national waters, in off-limits preserves, and in the largely un-policed international seas. Countries such as Ecuador and Costa Rica have shark finning regulations but don’t aggressively police the shark-rich, protected areas of the Galapagos and Cocos Island. Sharks are poached in the Pomene reserve of Mozambique, where fishermen get $280 per kilo of shark fins. Wherever there are sharks, there are people after their fins. While there have been cases of illegal shark fin activity being stopped, most of it is not.

Customs data shows that more than 100 countries are involved in the business of trading in shark fins. Most are exporters while the main consumer nations are mainland China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, and Thailand. The United States and the European Union also import significant quantities to local Chinese communities.

While there are many causes for the decline in shark populations, shark finning is no doubt one of the main contributors. Shark finning is a worldwide problem that can only be solved by a conscious effort on a global scale.

There are several nations and regions that have passed some shark finning regulations, listed below. However, just banning the practice of shark finning alone does not solve the problem. Sharks are being fished at unsustainable rates in any case. When laws are created, shark finning may still continue. Even if fishermen bring the entire shark to land in compliance with shark finning laws, the shark meat is not always marketable. It may go to fertilizer or other by-product. And one thing is unchanged: the demand for shark fins is resulting in sharks being killed by the millions in an unsustainable fashion. What is needed is a ban on shark fishing, not just a ban on shark finning.

Shark finning laws exist in:

American Samoa
Australia (most States and Territories)
Brazil
Canada
Costa Rica
Ecuador
European Union
Nicaragua
Oman
Palau
Panama
Seychelles (foreign vessels only)
South Africa (in national waters only)
USA
The Republic of the Maldives (complete ban on shark fishing recently enacted).


References:
NY Times, Hidden Cost of Shark Fin Soup: Its Source May Vanish, by JUAN FORERO, January 5, 2006
FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS, Yearbook of Fishery Statistics, 2005
Global estimates of shark catches using trade records from commercial markets, Shelley Clarke, Ecology Letters , Volume 9, Issue 10, Page 1115-1126, Oct 2006
Sharkwater , directed by Rob Stewart. www.sharkwater.com
DNA Helps Nab Illegal Shark Fin Traders, By JESSICA GRESKO, Associated Press Writer, August 16, 2006;
Mozambique: Illegal Shark Fishing in Inhambane , AllAfrica.com, October 10, 2007

Comments (4)

Graham Edmonstone said:

Ban Shark Finning
To remove only the sharks fin and then toss the rest of it away is really just a waste. The problem has to be stopped at the final destination. Ban those countries that offer shark fin soup or allow the importation of shark fins. These beautiful fish deserve their special place in our fragile ecosystem.
 
August 09, 2010
Votes: +2

jazzy said:

shark finning
This is great info dude
 
June 09, 2010
Votes: +0
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