Human Threats.
Impacts of
Habitat Loss on Sharks and Rays
By Dr Simon Pierce
MMF CO-FOUNDER / PRINCIPAL SCIENTIST
Dr Pierce is a global authority in shark and ray research. He co-founded the Marine Megafauna Foundation, leads their flagship Global Whale Shark Program, and serves as a member of the IUCN Shark Specialist Group. These articles were originally written for the UN Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals.
< Human Threats To Sharks & Rays
Sharks, rays, and their relatives live throughout the world's marine and freshwater systems, from the Arctic Ocean to the Zambezi River in Africa. Most are virtually unknown to us, with some living down to 3,000 m (1.86 miles) beneath the surface – many of the 1200+ species have never even been seen alive in their natural habitats. Others, though, are much more familiar. People have been using coastal seas and freshwater areas for millennia, and have a long history of interactions with the sharks and rays that also depend on these habitats to provide sheltered nursery grounds, feeding areas, and reproductive sites.
Habitat degradation and loss, defined here as the elimination or alteration of the conditions necessary for animals and plants to survive, can occur through many human-driven processes such as mangrove deforestation, dam construction, or nets uprooting coral communities. These damaged ecosystems become less resilient to change, and their reduced productivity means they can support fewer species and a lower abundance of life. As our populations continue to increase over the next century, and industry steadily moves into deeper waters, it is vital that we understand how human-induced changes have, and will, affect sharks and rays.
This Fact Sheet provides an overview of how habitat modification can disrupt the lives of sharks and their relatives, particularly those listed on the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS), and how we can get better at sharing space with these amazing fishes.
Mangrove Forests and Seagrass Meadows
Many ocean-dwelling sharks and rays rely on shallow bays and estuaries as nurseries for their pups. These are among the most productive environments on the planet, providing a seafood buffet for these trainee predators. Critically, mangroves and shallow bays also provide the small pups with a refuge from larger hunters. These coastal areas are also great places for people to live and work. To clear space for industry, such as aquaculture, 20–35% of global mangrove forests have been cut down over the past 50 years. Siltation from degraded rivers and dredging chokes shallow seagrass beds, leading to a 30–60% worldwide loss of seagrass meadows from the 1870s to the present.
These human impacts can tip the delicate balance that young sharks face: to find food, while not becoming food themselves. Lemon Sharks (Negaprion brevirostris) in the Bimini Islands, Bahamas, are probably the world's best-studied shark population. Construction of a large resort complex in the 1990s, involving substantial dredging and mangrove clearance, led to a 23% decline in the first-year survival of Lemon Shark pups. The loss of mangroves reduced the escape routes for these small sharks, while the siltation of seagrass beds simultaneously meant there were fewer fish for them to hunt.
Built structures can also affect sharks and rays, both directly and indirectly. The southeast Florida coast in the USA is a nursery area for young Giant Manta Rays (Mobula cf. birostris). The number of people living in Florida has increased rapidly, 262% from 1960 to 2008, with three-quarters of residents living along the coast. To accommodate leisure and commercial access to the ocean, the construction of piers and marinas has increased boat traffic and fishing pressure. Recent surveys found that 46% of these small Manta Rays bear wounds, most from propeller strikes and fishing gear entanglement. Manta Rays typically have just a single pup every 4–5 years, so reduced survival of these baby rays can quickly lead to a population crash.
Rivers and Lakes
About 5% of all shark and ray species live in, or regularly enter tropical rivers and lakes. Many of these are rays, including the Largetooth Sawfish (Pristis pristis) and the beautifully patterned South American freshwater rays (family Potamotrygonidae). Some sharks also use rivers, particularly River Sharks (Glyphis spp.) and Bull Sharks (Carcharhinus leucas), who often spend the first few years of life in freshwater.
Freshwater provides us with a critical resource for drinking, bathing, transport, agriculture, fisheries, and energy generation. While some freshwater systems are enormous, such as the Amazon and the Ganges rivers, human pressures can still have an outsized impact on the fish that live there. Flow controls have been imposed on many large rivers to provide safe and predictable access for people; this affects freshwater rays and sharks, who rely on seasonal rainfall and the natural flooding cycle to move within and between rivers.
As an example, the Fitzroy River in northwestern Australia is an important nursery area for Largetooth Sawfish. Adults give birth near the river mouth, and the young pups then swim 300–400 km up the river during floods, finding a safe home in the isolated pools that form in the upper river during the dry season. In an unfortunate comparative study, dam construction in the nearby Ord River has led to the ecological extinction of this Critically Endangered species. Reduced access to suitable riverine nursery areas is a key limiting factor for the five species of sawfishes (family Pristidae), which are now believed to be extinct in 55 countries where they were historically found.
Similarly, the Ganges Shark (Glyphis gangeticus) lives in the large rivers that meander down from Asia to the Indian Ocean. The Ganges river basin, which the species is named for, is home to more than 400 million people. The dense human population creates chronic threats, such as fishing pressure and pollution, which – along with the large dams in the river – have led to the extinction of the Ganges Shark in its namesake habitat. In other large rivers that once provided suitable habitat, such as the Indus River in Pakistan, there are four large dams and 22 barrages, with more proposed. The adult population of the Ganges Shark is now estimated to be in the low hundreds, scattered across a historical distribution that extends from Borneo to the Arabian Sea, with habitat loss isolating them from one another and making it harder to find a mate.
Seabeds and Coral Reefs
The relative accessibility of freshwater and coastal marine environments, and the obvious human impact on these habitats, means these areas have been a natural focus of shark and ray research. Other impacts can be tougher for us to see during day-to-day life, but research is helping to make their importance clear.
A good example is bottom trawl fishing which is, by far, the largest source of physical disturbance to the marine environment. Aside from actually catching sharks, rays, and ghost sharks (chimaeras), these weighted nets can literally flatten whole ecosystems when dragged across reefs, deep-sea corals, or sponge beds. Many sharks, such as Catsharks (Apristurus spp.), have sticky eggs that they attach to deepwater corals and sponges while the embryo can develop safely inside. The devastation of these habitats, which can take decades or more to recover, even if not disturbed again, multiplies the population loss of vulnerable shark and ray species. Demersal species, such as Angelsharks (Squatina squatina), can be particularly affected by the impacts of bottom trawling on their habitat and prey, with this Critically Endangered species now locally common only in the Canary Islands, where trawl fishing has been banned since 1986. Habitat loss and degradation compound the overfishing risk for 73 threatened shark and ray species.
Tropical coral reefs and reef flats have also been hard-hit by human impacts. Many species rely on these productive ecosystems, including reef specialists like the Walking Sharks. Some of these cute little sharks, such as the Leopard Epaulette Shark (Hemiscyllium michaeli) from Papua New Guinea, are restricted to a relatively small part of this biodiverse coast. Degradation of their reef flat habitat by road construction, and land conversion for palm oil, has affected about 20% of the species’ range over just the past 10 years. In Tanzania, which has severely depleted reef shark populations, passive acoustic monitoring of dynamite fishing on coral reefs has detected over 1000 blasts per month until official enforcement targeted this illegal method in 2017–2018. Human pressures on coral reefs across the world are reducing both the quantity and quality of habitat available, even to widespread reef shark species, leading to the decline and fragmentation of their populations.
Looking Forward
Habitat degradation and loss can, in a frighteningly short amount of time, permanently reduce the available space that sharks and their relatives have to live in. That is particularly tough to deal with for habitat specialists, such as freshwater rays and sharks, and those that have a naturally small distribution. Dietary specialists, such as the Bonnethead Shark (Sphyrna tiburo), which has recently been identified as the first omnivorous shark – seagrass makes up an estimated 62% of its juvenile diet, by gut content mass, and up to 40% in adult sharks – may also be at elevated risk.
The species whose range overlaps with dense human populations are disproportionately likely to be threatened. Some are now Critically Endangered, facing a high risk of global extinction. Individual records of Angelsharks in the Mediterranean Sea, sawfishes outside Australia and the USA, or any Ganges Shark occurrence, for example, are often now noteworthy enough for scientists to publish them – a recognized identifier of ecological extinction. For these species, they will clearly be helped by specific measures such as safeguarding natural river flows, fulfilling the CMS mandate to prevent obstacles to the migration of listed species.
Habitat loss is highly correlated with other human pressures. Coastal development is associated with higher levels of pollution, more fishing pressure, and increased boat traffic. Floodplain conversion to agricultural land generally leads to increased siltation, along with pesticide and fertilizer runoff, which in turn affects coral reefs, that are themselves simultaneously impacted by overfishing and climate change. Rather than trying to separate out and address all these issues separately, a recent initiative by the IUCN SSC Shark Specialist Group seeks to identify the world’s most ‘Important Shark and Ray Areas’. Management and conservation efforts can then focus on the specific areas that are most important to the life cycle of sharks and their relatives, including the most threatened species and those listed on CMS, to maximize the positive impact of protection and restoration.
For all the ocean wildlife that use human-modified areas during part of their lifecycle, which includes most of the world’s sharks and rays, preserving and restoring their habitats will speed their recovery from overfishing, and improve their resilience to other challenges. Everyone benefits from healthy oceans, and that means we need to provide space for other animals to thrive alongside people.
Further Reading
Important shark and ray areas. IUCN SSC Shark Specialist Group. www.sharkrayareas.org
Fish conservation in freshwater and marine realms: status, threats and management. Arthington AH, Dulvy NK, Gladstone W, Winfield IJ (2016) Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 26(5): 838–57.
Advances in understanding the roles and benefits of nursery areas for elasmobranch populations. Heupel MR, Kanno S, Martins AP, Simpfendorfer CA (2018) Marine and Freshwater Research 70(7): 897–907.
Overfishing and habitat loss drive range contraction of iconic marine fishes to near extinction. Yan HF, Kyne PM, Jabado RW, Leeney RH, Davidson LN, Derrick DH, Finucci B, Freckleton RP, Fordham SV, Dulvy NK (2021) Science Advances 7(7): eabb6026.
These articles on Human Threats To Sharks & Rays were originally written by Dr Simon Pierce in 2022 as fact sheets for the UN Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals, prepared by the IUCN Species Survival Commission (SSC) Shark Specialist Group, with funding provided by the government of Germany and the Principality of Monaco and with technical support from the Sharks MOU Advisory Committee. The direct link to the document, available in English, French, and Spanish, is here. Please note that the online text and imagery will likely have been altered from the original.