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The global status of sharks, rays, and chimaeras
Jabado, R.W.; Morata, A.Z.A.; Bennett, R.H.; Finucci, B.; Ellis, J.R.; Fowler, S.L.; Grant, M.I.; Barbosa Martin, A.P.; Sinclair, S.L. (Ed.) (2024). The global status of sharks, rays, and chimaeras. IUCN: Gland. ISBN 978-2-8317-2318-1. 2074 pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.59216/ssg.gsrsrc.2024

Keywords
    Conservation
    Rays
    Sharks
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Chimaeras; Conservation status; Threatened species; Species management

Authors  Top 
  • Jabado, R.W., editor
  • Morata, A.Z.A., editor
  • Bennett, R.H., editor
  • Finucci, B., editor
  • Ellis, J.R., editor
  • Fowler, S.L., editor
  • Grant, M.I., editor
  • Barbosa Martin, A.P., editor
  • Sinclair, S.L., editor

Abstract
    In the 20 years since the IUCN SSC Shark Specialist Group’s first status report (2005), much has changed for sharks, rays and chimaeras. This report updates our understanding, and the scope of information reflects the scale of these two decades of change. The breadth of research topics has expanded, mirroring the inclusion of a greater diversity of species, and attention is being trained on the emerging threats and the accelerating global changes to aquatic ecosystems. The 2005 report heralded a sea change for sharks, rays and chimaeras, whose historical obscurity in policy, conservation and fisheries management was a serious concern. In this report, the increased focus that was called for is now apparent in the scale of work happening across the planet.

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