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  • 2 days ago
Their numbers have dropped dramatically in just 50 years.
Transcript
00:00Sharks may be scary, but they're also an integral part of our ocean's ecosystems.
00:08But now, according to a new study published in the journal Nature, overfishing of sharks
00:12has left a pretty big gap in ocean life.
00:14According to the research, some species of sharks and rays have dropped by 70% in the
00:19last 50 years alone.
00:20But the worst hit shark species was the white tip.
00:23It's now labeled critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of
00:27Nature, with researchers finding the species lost 98% of their populations worldwide in
00:32the last 60 years.
00:33Sharks are often fished for their fins, or accidentally caught by careless fishermen, and they grow
00:38relatively slowly and reproduce less often than other fish.
00:41And the researchers found that three-quarters of all the shark species in the study are
00:45now facing extinction.
00:46One of the study's authors and founder of the Marine Megafauna Foundation, Andrea Marshall,
00:50had this to say about the findings.
00:52It happened quicker than we could have ever imagined, and it demonstrated to us that we
00:56need to take immediate action.

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