The absence of sharks from abyssal regions of the world’s oceans
The oceanic abyss (depths greater than 3000 m), one of the largest environments on the planet, is
characterized by absence of solar light, high pressures and remoteness from surface food supply
necessitating special molecular, physiological, behavioural and ecological adaptations of organisms that
live there. Sampling by trawl, baited hooks and cameras we show that the Chondrichthyes (sharks, rays and
chimaeras) are absent from, or very rare in this region. Analysis of a global data set shows a trend of rapid
disappearance of chondrichthyan species with depth when compared with bony fishes. Sharks, apparently
well adapted to life at high pressures are conspicuous on slopes down to 2000 m including scavenging at
food falls such as dead whales. We propose that they are excluded from the abyss by high-energy demand,
including an oil-rich liver for buoyancy, which cannot be sustained in extreme oligotrophic conditions.
Sharks are apparently confined to ca 30% of the total ocean and distribution of many species is fragmented
around sea mounts, ocean ridges and ocean margins. All populations are therefore within reach of human
fisheries, and there is no hidden reserve of chondrichthyan biomass or biodiversity in the deep sea. Sharks
may be more vulnerable to over-exploitation than previously thought.
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Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Priede, Imants G., Froese, Rainer, Bailey, David M., Bergstad, Odd Aksel, Collins, Martin A. ORCID record for Martin A. Collins, Dyb, Jan Erik, Henriques, Camila, Jones, Emma G., King, Nicola