Marine wildlife advocates condemned the recent killing of a blue shark (Prionace glauca), and its pups, and called on the ...
Phys.org on MSN10d
Sharks are dying at alarming rates, mostly due to fishing. Retention bans may helpNearly one-third of sharks are threatened with extinction, mostly due to fishing. While mandated releases are helpful, ...
Prosperidad, AGUSAN DEL SUR (MindaNews / 21 March) – The Department of Agriculture’s Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic ...
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Study Finds on MSNShark Fishing is Pushing Some Species to the Brink of ExtinctionExplore the complex issue of catch-and-release sharks and why stronger measures are needed to protect threatened species worldwide.
A content creator took it upon himself to drop a drone to the bottom of The Great Blue Hole, located off the coast of Belize.
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Interesting Engineering on MSNSharks in peril: Industrial fishing pushes one-third of species toward extinctionHuman actions, such as incidental fishing and ineffective policies, push one-third of shark populations toward extinction.
Researchers urge stronger protections like fishing limits and habitat conservation to prevent further decline in shark ...
A large salmon shark in the center, with two blue sharks on the left and a common thresher shark on the right. The Big Fish Lab must sell 3,000 vouchers before the Oregon Department of Motor ...
Bans are most likely to benefit species with faster reproductive rates—like blue sharks, bonnetheads and angel sharks—because their populations tend to recover faster. The blue shark is ...
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