hdr_home (36K)
  HOME COLLECTION EDUCATION IMAGE GALLERY SOUTH FLORIDA ORGANIZATIONS MEETINGS STAFF
  SHARK TROPICAL
RESEARCH
FRESHWATER
RESEARCH
BIOLOGICAL
PROFILES
JUST FOR KIDS IN THE NEWS SITE LINKS FLMNH

IUCN/SSG logo

The IUCN/SSC Shark Specialist Group

Shark News 5: October 1995

Critically Endangered Large Coastal Sharks, a Case Study: the Sandbar Shark, Carcharhinus plumbeus (Nardo, 1827)
Jack Musick, School of Marine Science,
Virginia Institute of Marine Science,
College of William and Mary, Gloucester Point, VA 23062
Taxonomy

The sandbar shark, Carcharhinus plumbeus (Nardo, 1827), is a medium to large-sized requiem shark (Carcharhinidae) with a relatively short rounded snout, distinctive high triangular dorsal fin placed over or before the pectoral insertions, dermal ridge between the dorsal fins, large serrated triangular upper teeth, and narrow awl-shaped lower teeth. In life this species is light grey above and pristine white below, often with a brassy hue and white stripe along the flank. Originally described from the Adriatic Sea, it was subsequently described under various other names from other localities. Some names in recent use include: Carcharhinus millberti, Eulamia milberti, Galeolamna stevensi and Carcharhinus japonicus.
shark news
Figure 1. Sandbar shark being landed on long-line vessel.


Distribution and ecology

The sandbar shark is a coastal species typical in many aspects of its biology of many other common coastal sharks. The species has been recorded from the western Indian Ocean, south-east Asia, Japan, Australia, and Hawaii. Its occurrence in the Eastern Pacific is debatable. The sandbar shark occurs in the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean and is the most abundant large coastal shark in the western north Atlantic and eastern Gulf of Mexico. Tagging and genetic studies suggest that sandbar sharks from Cape Cod, Massachusetts, to the northern Yucatan peninsula in Mexico are comprised of a unit stock separate from the population reported from Trinidad to Brazil.

In the western North Atlantic, the sandbar shark exhibits strong seasonal movements. Adult female sandbar sharks migrate north into the middle Atlantic Bight in May and early June, when sea water temperatures approach 19°C, and use estuarine waters such as Chesapeake Bay and Delaware Bay as pupping grounds. Immediately after pupping these large females move offshore to 20-50 m depth. Neonates and juveniles aged 1-4 years utilise estuarine habitats during the summer. Larger juveniles use shallow coastal habitats (<20 m). Although the juvenile population in the middle Atlantic Bight exhibits approximately a 1:1 ratio of females to males, the adults are represented almost solely by females (very occasionally adult males are taken at greater than 100 m depth at the edge of the continental shelf). Adult males appear to inhabit the southern part of the range and are common off Florida and in the Gulf of Mexico. Sandbar sharks migrate south below Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, and further in September or October when seawater temperatures fall to 18-20°C. Some large juveniles and adults may migrate as far as southern Florida, Cuba and Mexico, while small juveniles and other larger juveniles and some adults may winter in warm waters at the edge of the Gulf Stream off the Carolinas. Off South Africa similar seasonal migrations into high latitudes in spring and lower latitudes in fall appear to occur. Island populations such as in Hawaii appear to be seasonally resident.

Sandbar sharks are euryphagous predators feeding on a wide variety of smaller demersal teleosts and elasmobranchs, as well as on cephalopods, and various crustaceans.

The sandbar shark is viviparous with a yolk sac placenta. Gestation has been estimated at 9-12 months in the western North Atlantic, 11-12 months off South Africa and the East China Sea, and 10-12 months off Taiwan. Females apparently have young onlyevery other year, with about 50% of mature females being pregnant off Taiwan. Conversely, only 17-27% of mature females captured off Florida were pregnant. However, most of the mature females examined in the mid-Atlantic Bight of the US in summer are pregnant or recently have born young. Therefore, the pregnancy rate in the western North Atlantic is probably near 50%, but it is difficult to obtain a synoptic sample of the entire population of mature females because of their wide geographic distribution and seasonal movements. Litter size is variable and depends in part on the size of the mother. In the western Atlantic, where female sandbar sharks mature at about 179-183 cm TL, litter size averages 8.4-9.3 (range = 1-14). Whereas in Hawaii where females sandbar sharks mature at 150 cm TL, mean litter size is only 5.5 (range = 1-8). Within a given geographic area litter size is only very weakly correlated with the size of the mother. In general, size at maturity, maximum size and litter size decrease from the western Atlantic to the western Indian Ocean, to Taiwan and Australia, to the east China Sea, and to Hawaii. Size at birth varies slightly by region, but does not follow the same geographic pattern. New born pups range from 56-75 cm TL with pups averaging 60-65 cm TL in most areas. Maximum reported size is 234 cm TL for females and 226 cm TL for males.

Sandbar sharks are slow-growing K-selected species. Although growth and age at maturity may be accelerated under captive conditions, wild populations grow very slowly and mature at a relatively late age. In the western Atlantic the von Bertalanffy growth coefficient, K, has been estimated to be very low (0.039 to 0.089) in validated studies using annuli on vertebral centra. Maturity in these studies was estimated at 13-16 years. However, in another study based on growth rates calculated from tag/recapture data, growth was considerably slower and age at maturity was estimated to be 29 years. Considerable debate has arisen concerning the discrepancy between the two methods, including the small tag/recapture sample size and the possible effects of tagging on growth rates. Regardless, sandbar sharks grow slowly and mature late.

Conservation status

Sandbar sharks are significant components of coastal shark fisheries world-wide. In the western Atlantic this species contributes up to 60% of the catch and 80% of the landings in the directed long-line fishery. In addition, the sandbar shark is second only to the blue shark (a pelagic species) in the US Atlantic recreational shark fishery.

During the last twenty years, recreational and commercial fisheries for sharks along the US Atlantic coast and in the Gulf of Mexico have expanded at rapid rates. Recreational catch has been estimated at 2.5 million sharks ( ca. 35,000 mt) annually; 20-40% of this is killed. Driven by increased marketability, the commercial fishery has rapidly expanded since 1985, with landings exceeding 7,100 mt in 1989.

Increased exploitation of sharks prompted the development of a US Fisheries Management Plan (FMP), implemented in 1993 for the shark resources of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts. In addition, several states (Virginia, North Carolina, Texas and Florida) have enacted laws to regulate shark fishing in their respective regions (14% of commercial and 64% of recreational catches occur in state controlled waters).

Regardless, a Scientific Review Panel of Experts concluded in April 1994 (Anon., 1994) that the stocks of large coastal sharks were depleted to much lower relative levels than realised in the FMP, and that stock recovery would take decades rather than two years as stated in the plan. Consequently, the Panel recommended that the total allowable catch (TAC) of sharks not be increased in 1995 as recommended in the management plan, but that the TAC remain constant. Some members of the Panel suggested that the TAC be reduced instead of being held constant or that the fishery be closed.
shark news
Figure 2. Catch per unit of effort of sandbar sharks expressed as sharks per 100 hooks for the years 1974-1993. Data collected during scientific surveys conducted by the Virginia Institute of Marine Science in coastal waters of the mid-Atlantic Bight of the USA. (Some years pooled to equalise sampling effort.)


The annual rate of replacement (r) used in the FMP model, 26% per year, is much higher than that calculated to be biologically possible for both fast-growing and slow-growing carcharhinids using accepted demographic models. Recent modelling in our laboratory suggests that for sandbar sharks the annual population increase rate can vary from 2.5% to 11.9% with an age at maturity of 15 years. If a more conservative age of first maturity of 29 years is used, then the maximum annual population increase rate would be 5.2%. These low rates of intrinsic increase are probably close to the real situation and reflect the K-selected life history parameters typical of virtually all sharks. The unrealistic r value used in the FMP was calculated using a surplus production fishery model based on a time series of commercial catch data. Such models may be useful for fast-growing, short-lived teleosts, but are inappropriate for slow-growing, long-lived fishes such as sandbar sharks. Most sharks, and large coastal species in particular, have life history characteristics that make them particularly vulnerable to overfishing. In the western Atlantic sandbar shark stocks have been reduced by 85-90% in just ten years because of over-exploitation. In addition, the age structure of the population has been shifted dramatically toward younger age classes. Adult females are very uncommon. Under the IUCN criteria for listing threatened species, the western North Atlantic population of sandbar sharks would be classified as "Critically Endangered" (IUCN, 1994).

This species continues to support a substantial fishery after such a severe population decline only because of the very large size of the original stock. Under the current FMP, the target fishery mortality (F = 0.25) can only lead to a continued population decline (Sminkey and Musick, in press). The western North Atlantic shark fishery is a multi-species fishery. Many species less common than the sandbar shark have undergone similar population declines, and at least one, the dusky shark Carcharhinus obscurus, has undergone an even greater population decline. This species matures at a larger size and later age than the sandbar shark and may reproduce only every three years.

The naive assumption of some resource managers that marine fish populations are not vulnerable to extinction because they are 'open', with large geographic ranges and unlimited immigration, is unfounded (Huntsman, 1994). Coastal stocks of even large migratory species such as sandbar sharks have discrete geographic boundaries. Over-fishing can rapidly deplete K-selected species. It may be true that fisheries will collapse of their own accord when stocks become so reduced that they are no longer profitable to pursue, but the notion that fisheries will become economically extinct before extinction of target species is not true. In a mixed-species fishery, where all species are subjected to the same fishery mortality rate, less-abundant species could be driven to extinction while numerically dominant species still continued to support the fishery. Thus, Manire and Gruber's (1990) concern that many shark species might be vulnerable to extinction appears to be well founded. Even if the fishery were completely closed, stock recovery of the sandbar shark and other large coastal species in the western North Atlantic would take several decades. The collapse of large coastal shark stocks in the western North Atlantic provides strong support for Congdon et al.'s (1993) contention: "The concept of sustainable harvest of already-reduced populations of long-lived organisms appears to be an oxymoron".

Bibliography

Anonymous. 1994. Report of the shark evaluation workshop, March 14-18, 1994. NOAA, NMFS, Southeast Fishery Center, Miami: 47pp.

Congdon, J.P., A.E. Dunham and R.C. Van Loben Sels. 1993. Delayed sexual maturity and demographics of Blanding's turtles ( Emydoidea blandingii). Implications for conservation and management of long-lived organisms. Conservation Biology 7(4): 826-833.

Huntsman, G.R. 1994. Endangered marine finfish: Neglected resources or beasts of fiction. Fisheries 19(7): 8-15.

IUCN. 1994. IUCN red list categories. IUCN Species Survival Commission, Gland, Switzerland: 13 pp.

Manire, C. and S. Gruber. 1990. Many sharks may be headed toward extinction. Conservation Biology 4(1): 10-11.

Sminkey, T.R. and J.A. Musick. In Press. Demographic analysis of sandbar sharks in the western North Atlantic. Fishery Bulletin.

Editor's note: The above is an abbreviated version (excluding most references) of the material supplied by the author for the Shark Action Plan. The IUCN threatened species assessment is provisional until agreed by the Shark Specialist Group.