Coherent assessments of Europe's marine fishes show regional divergence and megafauna loss
Date
2017Author
Afonso, Pedro
Pollom, Riley A.
KOVACIC, Marcelo
POLLARD, David
ELLIS, Jim R.
COLLETTE, Bruce B.
NEDREAAS, Kjell
Stump, Emilie
RUSSELL, Barry C.
GARCIA, Silvia
JUNG, Armelle B. J.
ALVAREZ, Helena
DELGADO, Joao
Dulvy, Nicholas K.
Carpenter, Kent E.
Farrell, Edward D.
Florin, Ann-Britt
Polidoro, Beth A.
Lawson, Julia M.
LORANCE, Pascal
UIBLEIN, Franz
CRAIG, Matthew
ALLEN, David J.
FOWLER, Sarah L.
Walls, Rachel H. L.
Comeros-Raynal, Mia T.
Harvey, Michael S.
Dureuil, Manuel
BISCOITO, Manuel
POLLOCK, Caroline
PHILLIPS, Sophy R. McCully
PAPACONSTANTINOU, Constantinos
SOLDO, Alen
Knudsen, Steen Wilhelm
GIL DE SOLA, Luis
SERENA, Fabrizio
Keskin, Cetin
Fernandes, Paul G.
Ralph, Gina M.
NIETO, Ana
CRIADO, Mariana Garcia
VASILAKOPOULOS, Paraskevas
MARAVELIAS, Christos D.
Cook, Robin M.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Europe has a long tradition of exploiting marine fishes and is promoting marine economic activity through its Blue Growth strategy. This increase in anthropogenic pressure, along with climate change, threatens the biodiversity of fishes and food security. Here, we examine the conservation status of 1,020 species of European marine fishes and identify factors that contribute to their extinction risk. Large fish species (greater than 1.5 m total length) are most at risk; half of these are threatened with extinction, predominantly sharks, rays and sturgeons. This analysis was based on the latest International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) European regional Red List of marine fishes, which was coherent with assessments of the status of fish stocks carried out independently by fisheries management agencies: no species classified by IUCN as threatened were considered sustainable by these agencies. A remarkable geographic divergence in stock status was also evident: in northern Europe, most stocks were not overfished, whereas in the Mediterranean Sea, almost all stocks were overfished. As Europe proceeds with its sustainable Blue Growth agenda, two main issues stand out as needing priority actions in relation to its marine fishes: the conservation of marine fish megafauna and the sustainability of Mediterranean fish stocks.
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