Sharks are utilised to the fullest — shark fin is a delicacy and can fetch up to 400 USD per Kg while its liver and skin are used in making poultry feed. Its boneless fillets are sold as salmon and liver is used to make poultry feed. Both, horror and mystic surround sharks and the least they deserve is ethical marketing. Ethical marketing is a problem with many species. The workshop delegates had dinner at a well reputed restaurant near the art gallery in Karachi, some ordered ‘sea bass’ and ended up with cheap, farmed variety of pengasus imported from Vietnam on their plate, wrong choice by the restaurant to serve it on the table of fish experts that could easily tell this from the texture of fillet. At least the restaurant management was fair enough to not charge for the orders of sea bass. Although import of cheap pengasus can reduce some pressure on the local varieties of fish but then it should be marketed ethically. Responsible trade, consumption and management are key to conserving sharks.
Some shark species are threatened due to trade and that is the very reason that about 18 species have been included to the list of species which require export and import permits regulated under the Convention for the International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). Pakistan is a signatory to CITES and has ratified it by developing a national law which is known as Pakistan Trade Control of Wild Fauna and Flora Act, 2012. This means that export of these shark fins outside Pakistan now requires CITES permits otherwise it would be illegal.
Marine Fisheries Department does not have data according to the species, so we don’t know what marine fish species have been on a decline. This kind of data is crucial in managing species. Sharks are extremely vulnerable because they grow slowly, mature late and have low fecundity. Some international chain of hotels such as Hyatt, Hilton, Mandarin Oriental group have taken sharks off their menu and some airlines such as Etihad, Singapore airlines, Cathy Pacific have pledged that they would not carry any shark product. The conservation of sharks needs stakeholder involvement especially fishermen, customs authorities and Marine Fisheries Department for the sole purpose of monitoring illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 20th, 2014.
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Very informative...didnt even know that we have sharks in Pakistan plus they are eaten locally. Its encouraging that someone writes about animals. Lets not insult animals by referring them as our parliamentarians!
The real endangered sharks of this country are the ruling elite on both sides of the aisle of the parilament