Sharkless Seas?
by Peter Vine
Pictures by J. Stafford-Deitsch
witnessing a gradual process leading inexorably to the total demise of
sharks on Arabian coral reefs? Throughout the world sharks are under such
intense attack by Man that their numbers have declined to the point where
certain species are now threatened with extinction. The situation in the
Red Sea is also critical and some areas that were until recently renowned
for their richly productive reefs, replete with fish of all sizes, including
sharks, have been transformed into desolate habitats where both the coral-reef
fish and their primitive predators have been wiped out. Meanwhile the general
public is still being fed the misleading old line that the seas are full
of man-eating sharks and we must protect ourselves at all costs from them.
Isn’t it time that sharks received a better press and that we turned our
attentions to saving both them and their rich underwater habitats rather
than continuing the slaughter?
This article examines the question and looks at
some pertinent facts concerning the issue.

is a place that I could take you to in Arabia that was regarded, twenty
years ago, as one of the most beautiful wildlife habitats on our planet.
It was featured in National Geographic magazine; those who went there were
stunned by both its natural beauty and the great variety of its wildlife.
Not only did it possess physical grandeur, but it was alive with movement,
colour and the vibrant feeling of an ecosystem in the peak of its condition.
It was also a place where you could see some of the most impressive large
predators on Earth. The legend that was created around this most magnificent
place lives on but the reality has changed dramatically and devastatingly.
Whilst the physical form remains, much of the life and virtually all the
atmosphere has been destroyed. The colourful living carpet has turned a
monotonous shade of grey; the shimmering movements of darting exotically
coloured animals have been reduced to a mere fragment of its former grandeur
and the excitement of witnessing some of the world’s most graceful large
animals is no longer to be had here. As if this was not enough, the debris
of our human race is scattered over the seabed as if it was a large refuse
disposal area rather than a site of world importance for wildlife. The
remarkable thing about all this is that it has happened with hardly a murmur
of protest and, despite the terrible destruction that has been wrought
there, it is still a major tourism attraction. Indeed, I would go further
than that; not only is it still a commercial attraction, but it is one
where visitors are still awed by its physical beauty and by what remains
of its wildlife. The great sadness that the place evokes is with those
of us who saw it in its true magnificence and for whom the memory is an
indelible reminder of what it should look like today; and of the alarming
rate at which we are destroying the very things that we find most beautiful.
The place? Ras Muhammed, on the southern tip of
the Sinai Peninsula. The impressive predator? Grey reef, hammerhead, silver-tip
and other sharks. The destroyer? Man. The means of destruction? Fishing,
pollution and a mushrooming tourism diving industry. The reason for silence?
The underwater world is still a mystery for many government administrators
and most of the general public. What happens beneath the sea’s surface
is out of our everyday gaze and therefore not brought to our constant attention
(‘out of sight, out of mind’). Films, magazine articles and books have
continued to glorify the great richness of areas like the Red Sea, fearing
to diminish the impressions of excitement and even danger that are implicit
in their dramatic presentations. Conservation priorities have tended to
focus on terrestrial rather than marine habitats, both in Arabia and throughout
the world. And finally perhaps, we have demonised the shark to such an
extent that neither the general public nor most government administrators
would be likely to place shark conservation high on their agendas.
There are over forty different species of sharks
found in Arabian waters and until quite recently certain reefs in the Red
Sea were regarded as some of the most reliable places for photographing
or filming sharks in their natural setting. Unfortunately however the few
efforts that have been made to conserve sharks have so far been largely
ineffective and in consequence their numbers are in decline almost everywhere.
One reason for the rapid drop in shark numbers is to be found in the biology
of the animal itself which has a slow reproductive rate. Whilst most bony
fish have reproductive systems in which many thousands of eggs are produced
and have the potential to quite rapidly recover from population crashes,
a female shark only produces a few offspring and there is quite a long
gestation period (from 8 to 18 months in most cases). Added to this slow
reproduction is a fairly slow growth rate with many species taking as long
as twelve years to reach maturity. Thus sharks do not have the innate ability
to replenish their numbers quickly, following intense fishing of a particular
area. An additional problem for many Red Sea sharks is the fact that species
like the grey-reef shark live for long periods of time on a single reef.
Indeed, divers who have taken to shark-watching with as much passion as
their land-bound colleagues watch birds, have learned to recognise individual
sharks which they have observed feeding at the same sites year after year.
Whilst the demise of sharks at Ras Muhammed is
due to a combination of factors, i.e. fishing, pollution, habitat destruction
and disturbance by divers, each of these factors can operate in their own
right as the major triggering factor for a shark population crash. There
is no doubt however that the single most important reason why sharks are
disappearing from Arabia’s coastal waters is that they are being fished
with new levels of intensity and efficiency. There are two main reasons
for this: firstly, increased fishing of all stocks has reached a widespread
state of over-exploitation, i.e. the level of harvesting is greater than
that which can be sustained on an annual basis and therefore stocks are
declining, forcing fishermen to spend more and more effort to catch the
same or less fish. This has placed pressure on fishermen to catch what
were previously regarded as marginal or even undesirable species. The second
major reason is that a number of major shark fisheries, elsewhere in the
world, have already been almost, or completely, fished-out whereas the
Asian market for shark-fin has grown. The result is that prices have risen
and new shark fisheries have been developed or existing ones expanded,
in order to try to keep up with the demand.
The shark fin industry is a huge one. It was estimated
that 100 million sharks were killed in 1989 and it is believed that this
figure was significantly exceeded during the early 90’s. As the Florida
shark fishery collapsed prices for fins rose dramatically from $12 per
kilogram (wet weight) in December 1990 to over $24 in 1992. Since then
prices have risen further and fishermen based at several fishing centres
around the Arabian peninsula have understandably cashed in on the demand
by actively targeting sharks. The report of Yemeni fishing boats in the
western Red Sea with their boats loaded to the gunwales with shark fins
(see page 42) is just one more indication of this trend. The fact that
divers and film-makers may have to go elsewhere to enjoy the sharks which
have for so long been a major feature of reefs in the central Red Sea will
impact upon previously sustainable local economies, probably to a greater
extent than the short term benefits of the relatively small income that
will be made from selling the fins. The fact that this is also a cruel
method of fishing in which the fins are often cut off the live shark which
is then returned to the sea to die a lingering death, is probably of little
concern to most people involved in the business, nor indeed to a large
section of the general public. As one who has seen these animals in the
dignity and splendour of their natural settings, I have to say that this
facet of their slaughter simply adds to the general dismay with which we
observe what is happening.
If we are going to start caring about sharks and
their marine habitats in the same way that we have begun to focus upon
terrestrial creatures like the Arabian leopard, then we must also improve
our understanding of them. One of the first aspects of this is to try to
break down the myth that sharks constitute a major danger to Man. One aspect
of the shark’s general decline, world-wide, is of course that whatever
threat they may have been in the past is greatly diminished as their numbers
dwindle. Apart from this however, sharks never were the terrible ogres
that they have been held up to be. There are many different ways to explain
this; one is that the world-wide death toll on humans from shark attacks
is somewhere between ten and twenty five people per year compared to a
world-wide death toll on sharks from humans at around 100 million! Furthermore,
most shark attacks can be explained by behavioural considerations such
as swimmers entering seal swimming areas which are known shark feeding
grounds. The annual death toll from shark attacks in Arabia is, in most
years, zero. Ask any experienced diver who has dived in the Red Sea; when
he or she sees a shark it is a moment for celebration and, if they are
so equipped, taking its picture, rather than fleeing in fear. If such divers
are truthful very few of them will claim to have ever been directly threatened
by a shark, and those that have will have extricated themselves from the
shark’s territory without use of any spear-gun or other weapon. Most such
divers will also explain that sharks are more afraid of divers than the
divers are of the sharks. Finally, they will tell you that the only time
when they are afraid of sharks is when there are spear fishermen in the
water. The spear fishermen claim they need the spears for protection but
experienced divers know very well that spearing fish attracts sharks, excites
them and can, on some occasions lead to a confused shark attacking a diver
in the mistaken impression that he or she is the injured fish. An effective
and properly policed ban on spear guns has long been recognised to be a
good first step towards marine conservation in all coral-reef areas and
indeed in more temperate waters.
The presence of sharks on a coral-reef is generally
an indication of the overall health of the ecosystem they occupy. They
are at the peak of the pyramid of life whose base is the sea-weeds, sea-grasses
and symbiotic zooxanthellae within the reef-building corals. Their absence
is generally a signal that all is not well. Let us hope that we can recognise
the value of these wonderful animals before we destroy them for ever. It
is, I feel, time that concerted action was taken to protect both the habitats
and unique species of Arabian waters. As part of this effort shark conservation
will need special attention.