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Illegal Trade of Shark Body

Illegal Trade of Shark Body

Source: The Hindu
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Overview

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  1. News in Brief
  2. About Report Netted in Illegal Wildlife Trade: Sharks of India
  3. About Shark Species

Why in the News?

16,000 kg of shark fins were seized between January 2010 to December 2022, according to a report by the World Wide Fund for Nature-India (WWF-India) and TRAFFIC.

News in Brief

  • Recent TRAFFIC report Netted in illegal wildlife trade: Sharks of India aims to sound the alarm about India’s illegal shark trade and highlight ongoing threats and conservation concerns.
  • A significant amount of shark cartilage and teeth were also seized.
  • They constituted the most common shark-derived product seized, reported in over 80 per cent of the seizures.
  • Significant volumes of shark cartilage and teeth were also seized.
About Report Netted in Illegal Wildlife Trade: Sharks of India

  • Tamil Nadu accounted for nearly 65 per cent of the shark seizure incidents, followed by other states such as Karnataka, Gujarat, Kerala, and Maharashtra.
  • The confiscated products were destined for Singapore, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, Sri Lanka, and mainland China.
  • The demand for shark fins and meat is a major driver of the global shark fishery.
  • Shark fins are the most sought-after shark product used to make ‘shark-fin soup,’ a delicacy.
Issues related to Illegal Shark Trade
  • Illegal shark trade is a serious conservation threat to sharks not just in India but globally.
  • Misdeclaring relevant species on permits is one of the main ways sharks are traded illegally worldwide.
  • The lack of capacity to identify the shark fins against numerous potential shark species in trade is a significant gap in curbing their illicit trade.
  • Insufficient monitoring mechanisms further make it challenging to differentiate between the legal and illegal trade of sharks
About Shark Species

  • Sharks are crucial to our ecosystem.
  • Being top predators in the oceanic food web, sharks prey on various species, including plankton, fish, crustaceans and marine mammals.
  • Overfishing, coupled with low biological productivity, puts them at a higher risk of extinction when compared to most other vertebrates.
Shark Species in India

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