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| Title: | Critical habitats for sharks and rays in Asia remain largely unprotected |
| Authors: | Adriana Gonzalez-Pestana et al. Vo Van Quang |
| Keywords: | Asia Shark Ray Habitat Diversity hotspot Chondrichthyans Marine protected area |
| Issue Date: | 2026 |
| Series/Report no.: | Biodiversity and Conservation, Vol. 35, No.179, 38 pp., 2026;https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-026-03356-2 |
| Abstract: | The Asia region harbors exceptional chondrichthyan (shark, ray, and chimaera) diversity
but faces intense fishing pressure. The Important Shark and Ray Areas (ISRA) process
provides a collaborative, evidence-based framework to identify critical habitats and inform
spatial management. We assessed ISRAs across the Bay of Bengal, Southeast Asia, and
the Northwest Pacific to characterize their extent, ecological significance, and conservation relevance. We delineated 122 ISRAs spanning~1 million km2 (~ 3% of the region)
across 12 jurisdictions and international waters, encompassing habitats for 121 species
(~ 30% of Asia’s chondrichthyans), 76% of which are threatened. Depleted taxa (e.g., giant
guitarfishes, Glaucostegidae) were represented, but charismatic megafauna (e.g., Whale
Shark Rhincodon typus) were overrepresented. In contrast, deepwater and freshwater species were underrepresented. Reproductive Areas were the most common ISRA sub-criterion applied (52% of ISRAs), largely in nearshore zones, while areas for range-restricted
species were less frequently (18%) identified. Twelve ISRAs overlapped with biodiversity
hotspots, including seven in areas of high overall chondrichthyan species richness and five
in areas of high range-restricted species richness. Citizen science was the predominant
research method used to delineate ISRAs, while fisheries data were underused despite the
region’s major fisheries footprint. Geographic coverage was uneven: Indonesia held the
most ISRAs (n =40; 71.7% of ISRA coverage) while eight jurisdictions (e.g., Viet Nam,
China, Republic of Korea) lacked ISRAs due to data gaps. Protection shortfalls are stark:
MPAs cover <5% of national waters in 16 jurisdictions (eight with<1%); 5.4% of ISRA
area lies within MPAs; and only 2.8% of ISRA spatial extent overlaps with no-take zones.
These results provide a regional foundation to guide spatial planning, prioritize management, close data gaps, and support recovery of Asia’s diverse and imperiled chondrichthyan assemblages. |
| URI: | http://tvhdh.vnio.org.vn:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/21759 |
| ISSN: | 1572-9710 |
| Appears in Collections: | Công bố khoa học ở tạp chí quốc tế - International research papers (Bibliographic record and/or full-text)
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