Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Centro de Investigaciones Ecológicas Subtropicales, Centro de Investigaciones del Bosque Atlántico, Puerto Iguazú, Misiones, Argentina.
PLoS One. 2011 May 5;6(5):e19356. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0019356.
Sharks are one of the most threatened groups of marine animals, as high exploitation rates coupled with low resilience to fishing pressure have resulted in population declines worldwide. Designing conservation strategies for this group depends on basic knowledge of the geographic distribution and diversity of known species. So far, this information has been fragmented and incomplete. Here, we have synthesized the first global shark diversity pattern from a new database of published sources, including all 507 species described at present, and have identified hotspots of shark species richness, functional diversity and endemicity from these data. We have evaluated the congruence of these diversity measures and demonstrate their potential use in setting priority areas for shark conservation. Our results show that shark diversity across all species peaks on the continental shelves and at mid-latitudes (30-40 degrees N and S). Global hotspots of species richness, functional diversity and endemicity were found off Japan, Taiwan, the East and West coasts of Australia, Southeast Africa, Southeast Brazil and Southeast USA. Moreover, some areas with low to moderate species richness such as Southern Australia, Angola, North Chile and Western Continental Europe stood out as places of high functional diversity. Finally, species affected by shark finning showed different patterns of diversity, with peaks closer to the Equator and a more oceanic distribution overall. Our results show that the global pattern of shark diversity is uniquely different from land, and other well-studied marine taxa, and may provide guidance for spatial approaches to shark conservation. However, similar to terrestrial ecosystems, protected areas based on hotspots of diversity and endemism alone would provide insufficient means for safeguarding the diverse functional roles that sharks play in marine ecosystems.
鲨鱼是受威胁最严重的海洋动物群体之一,因为高捕捞率加上对捕捞压力的低恢复力导致全球种群数量下降。为该群体设计保护策略取决于对已知物种地理分布和多样性的基本了解。到目前为止,这些信息是零碎和不完整的。在这里,我们从新的已发表来源数据库中综合了第一个全球鲨鱼多样性模式,其中包括目前描述的所有 507 个物种,并从这些数据中确定了鲨鱼物种丰富度、功能多样性和特有性的热点地区。我们评估了这些多样性措施的一致性,并证明它们在确定鲨鱼保护的优先区域方面具有潜在用途。我们的结果表明,所有物种的鲨鱼多样性在大陆架和中纬度(30-40 度北纬和南纬)达到峰值。物种丰富度、功能多样性和特有性的全球热点地区位于日本、台湾、澳大利亚东海岸和西海岸、东南非、东南巴西和美国东南地区。此外,一些物种丰富度较低或中等的地区,如澳大利亚南部、安哥拉、智利北部和西欧,以高功能多样性而脱颖而出。最后,受鱼翅捕捞影响的物种显示出不同的多样性模式,峰值更接近赤道,整体分布更具海洋性。我们的研究结果表明,鲨鱼多样性的全球模式与陆地和其他研究充分的海洋分类群明显不同,这可能为鲨鱼保护的空间方法提供指导。然而,与陆地生态系统类似,仅基于多样性和特有性热点的保护区将不足以保护鲨鱼在海洋生态系统中发挥的多样化功能作用。