| April
11, 2005
Research Shows Overfishing Of
Sharks Key Factor In Coral Reef Decline
Unprecedented study describes sources
contributing to decline of Caribbean reefs
By Mario Aguilera
Their position
at the pinnacle of the marine food chain is legendary.
Now, understanding
sharks and their significance as top predators—and the
consequences of human activity towards them—has taken
on new importance through a new study by scientists in San Diego
and Spain.
Jordi
Bascompte and Carlos Melián of the Integrative Ecology
Group, Estación Biológica de Doñana, Consejo
Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, in Sevilla,
Spain, and Enric Sala of Scripps Institution of Oceanography
at the University of California, San Diego, developed an unprecedented
model of a Caribbean marine ecosystem and details of its intricate
predator-prey interactions. This food “web” covered
1,000 square kilometers to a depth of 100 meters and included
some 250 species of marine organisms. The study, published in
the April 12 edition of the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, included an intricate network of more
than 3,000 links between these species.
The project was one
of the largest and most detailed investigations of marine food
webs and the first study to integrate food web structure, dynamics
and conservation.
One of the most striking
products of the study is a stark picture of human impacts on
marine ecosystems and the consequences of targeted fishing.
In the Caribbean, overfishing of sharks triggers a domino effect
of changes in abundance that carries down to several fish species
and contributes to the overall degradation of the reef ecosystem.
Overfishing species randomly, the study shows, is not likely
to cause these cascading effects.
“It appears that
ecosystems such as Caribbean coral reefs need sharks to ensure
the stability of the entire system,” said Sala, deputy
director of the Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation
at Scripps.
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Enric
Sala
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Jordi
Bascompte
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When sharks are overfished,
a cascade of effects can lead to a depletion of important grazers
of plant life. This is because there are fewer sharks to feed
on carnivorous fish such as grouper—causing an increase
in their numbers and their ability to prey on parrotfishes.
The removal of plant-eating animals such as parrotfishes has
been partly responsible for the shift of Caribbean reefs from
coral to algae dominated, the authors note. Thus overfishing
of sharks may contribute further to the loss of resistance of
coral reefs to multiple human disturbances.
“The community-wide
impacts of fishing are stronger than expected because fishing
preferentially targets species whose removal can destabilize
the food web,” the authors conclude in their report.
Because of their comprehensive
approach in developing the intricate food web, the authors say
their study and its results address more than individual species
protection and speak to larger ecosystem protection issues.
“The paper presents
a community-wide approximation of conservation problems,”
said Bascompte. “We cannot asses all of the implications
of overfishing by only looking at the target species or a few
others. Species are embedded in a complex network of relationships
and this network has a particular shape. This has large implications
for the propagation of the consequences of overfishing through
the whole food web.”
Funding for the study
was provided by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology
and a grant from the History of Marine Animal Populations Program
of the Census of Marine Life, which was sponsored by the Alfred
P. Sloan Foundation.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
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