Les désignations utilisées et la présentation des éléments sur cette carte n'impliquent l'expression d'aucune opinion de la part de l'UICN concernant le statut juridique de tout pays, territoire, ville ou zone ou de ses autorités, ou concernant la délimitation de ses frontières ou frontières.

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Addressing Shark and Ray Bycatch in Sabah

Détails du projet

NomAddressing Shark and Ray Bycatch in Sabah
DescriptionMalaysian waters provide important habitat for globally important populations of sharks and rays. There are at least 63 species of sharks and 84 species of rays that receive very little legal protection. There are only ten protected species of sharks and rays, most of which continue to be landed as bycatch in commercial trawl fisheries. Sharks and rays are not an ’official’ targeted fishery, and therefore are not yet accorded the levels of management and protection needed to sustain populations. Captures have led to changes in species composition and abundance, and concerns over drastic population declines. Most small-scale fishers do not report catches, and captures from these fisheries remain unrecorded and unquantified. It is likely therefore that the total shark and ray capture figures are higher than fishery estimates suggest. It is imperative effective conservation measures are implemented to safeguard these populations into the future. Recent efforts point to several opportunities to safeguard key pupping and development grounds for many shark and ray species. MRF’s spatial data has identified areas that could be reasonably managed via Sabah’s Department of Fisheries, and our work aims to introduce more effective spatial management for shark and ray populations and address bycatch in a holistic manner, safeguarding these endangered species into the future. The overall goal of this programme is the provision of safeguarding measures to conserve endangered sharks and rays in Sabah that include spatial management, bycatch reduction, improved knowledge, and greater public participation. In the coming years, we intend to collaborate with the Department of Fisheries to establish Malaysia’s first time-area closed area for trawl vessels, which comprise ~80% of Sabah’s fishery fleet on a trial basis, initiating trials with vessel monitoring systems and a temporary closed fishing area to be determined by Sabah Fisheries and Sabah Parks.
Constituants contributeurs de l’UICNMarine Research FoundationIUCN World Commission on Environmental Law 2021-2025
Date de début31/07/2019
Date de fin30/12/2022
Actions de conservation1.2 Resource & Habitat Protection2.1 Site/Area Management4.2 Training4.3 Awareness & Communications5.2 Policies & Regulations6.1 Linked Enterprises & Livelihood Alternatives
Budget annuel nécessaire250 000,00 $US
Budget annuel total150 000,00 $US
Personnel♀ 5 | ♂ 1
Bénéficiaires♀ 50 | ♂ 500
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Giant Freshwater Ray.jpg
MRF Time-Lapse Camera.jpg
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Réduction potentielle du risque d'extinction des espèces résultant des mesures de réduction des menaces

Valeur absolue (STAR)

52,1

0,3% du potentiel total de conserversation de la biodiversité de Malaisie est potentiellement couvert par ce projet

17 033,5

5,5% du potentiel de conservation de la biodiversité de Asie provient de Malaisie.

310 880,6

26% du potentiel mondial de conservation de la biodiversité provient de Asie.

Ce diagramme à barres empilées représente la désagrégation relative de l'opportunité potentielle totale de la contribution sélectionnée pour réduire le risque d'extinction des espèces mondiales en prenant des mesures pour réduire les différentes menaces qui pèsent sur les espèces à l'intérieur de ses frontières. Les pourcentages correspondent à la part de l'opportunité totale qui pourrait être atteinte en réduisant cette menace particulière.

% Contribution des menaces à l'extinction des espèces

1.18%
8.1 Invasive non-native/alien species/diseases
1.37%
5.4 Fishing & harvesting aquatic resources
1.44%
9.2 Industrial & military effluents
1.98%
1.1 Housing & urban areas
5.32%
11.4 Storms & flooding
6.19%
7.1 Fire & fire suppression
9.36%
2.2 Wood & pulp plantations
16.48%
5.1 Hunting & collecting terrestrial animals
21.93%
5.3 Logging & wood harvesting
27.43%
2.1 Annual & perennial non-timber crops

Type de menace