• Sitemap
  • Expeditions
  • Blog
  • Bookings
  • Press
Email: staff@sharkdiver.com Call: 415.233.4951 or Toll Free: 888.328.7449
English Afrikaans Arabic Chinese (Simplified) Danish Dutch Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Italian Japanese Norwegian Russian Spanish
Thursday, 17 May 2012
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Our Company
    • Shark Conservation
  • Dive Packages
    • Tiger Shark Diving
    • Great White Shark Diving
    • Deep Sub Shark Adventures
    • Elite Adventures
  • Film Crews
  • Shark Diver TV
  • Industry Blog
    • Industry News
    • Press
  • Bookings

Shark Diving

Elite Adventures

Film & TV Production

Ken Okaniwa Throws Down - Shark Conservation Goes Crazy

Share

Ken Okaniwa is a minister at the embassy of Japan in London and ­director of the Japan Information and Cultural Centre.

He also just penned "It is wrong to claim that the global shark population is declining," an op ed for the Guardian newspapers in London.

The electronic ink had not even dried on that article before howls of discontent and gnashing of teeth could be heard across the shark conservation spectrum:


It is wrong to claim that the global shark population is declining

Your article reports the assertion by conservation groups that "growing demand for shark fins, coupled with modern fishing methods, has caused a rapid decline in shark populations around the world" (A bloody business: Japanese town feeding appetite for shark fin soup, 12 February).

But there is no clear evidence for a global decline in shark stocks. Reduced catches can reflect various factors such as the intensity of fishing methods and variations in demand, in addition to the actual level of stocks.

In particular, the article refers to the blue shark as having been designated "near threatened" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). The fact is that an assessment of the blue shark population since 1971, published by the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (an organisation of 25 nations and regions including Japan, the US, Australia, New Zealand and the EU), demonstrated that stocks declined in the 1980s but later recovered to exceed the 1971 figure, and remained stable thereafter.

It is also notable that "near threatened" is the second least serious of the seven categories employed by the IUCN – which itself declares that the blue shark does not qualify for "threatened" status.

You report: "Several countries, including the US, have taken steps to conserve shark populations, but [the shark conservationist Mayumi Takeda] holds out little hope that Japan will follow suit." However, Japan is in fact one of the few countries to have prepared its own action plan based on the UN's International Plan of Action for the Conservation and Management of Sharks.

In addition, Japan has not only been providing data on shark stock assessment to the relevant international bodies but has also been encouraging the promotion of appropriate stock management methods.

Japan has been at the forefront of international efforts to protect threatened species. For example, at the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) conference in 2009, Japan supported a proposal to ban the retention of thresher sharks in the Atlantic Ocean (the proposal would mean that the sharks have to be released immediately after capture). At the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission in 2010, Japan supported the EU bid to prohibit the retention of three types of thresher shark

At the ICCAT in 2010, Japan proposed banning the retention of oceanic whitetip sharks, which was adopted. Japan also supported the EU proposals to ban the retention of hammerhead sharks and porbeagle sharks, though the latter was not adopted due to opposition from other countries.

Every country has its own dietary practices based on its particular historical and cultural background, and such matters should be discussed in a respectful way. Protecting sharks and other species requires a factual, science-based approach. This is how Japan will continue its efforts

Shark Diver Industry blog

The accidental industry blog covering sharks, shark diving, shark conservation and things we find "amusing."
Blogging since 2008.

Shark Diver Conservation

Sharkdivers Blog

  • Albert Falco and Cousteau Dancing in Heaven?
  • Best of 2011 at Isla Guadalupe - Martin Graf
  • Catalina Shark Nibbles and Good Media?
  • Shark Fins, Shark Media, and those Frickin' Lasers
  • Shark Surfing in NZ, Missing the Mark Completely?
  • Huge Great White Shark Caught in the Sea of Cortez

Shark Diver Press

  • Sport Diver Magazine - Shark Diving with SharkDiver.com
  • SharkDiver.com Behind the Scenes Gillette Commercial
  • The Value of a Live Shark - Bahamas Productions
  • Tiger Beach Shark Expeditions 2011 - CEO Trip Report
  • Shark Diver in the Vancouver Sun
  • Shark Cage Diving Cigar Aficionado Magazine

Shark Diver Gear

You've seen us on...

 

About the productions

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Dive Packages
  • Film Crews
  • Shark Diver TV
  • Industry Blog
  • Bookings
Copyright © 2001-2011. "Shark Diver" and the Shark Diver logo are trademarked. All rights reserved.