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At world’s largest shark conference, scientists warn of a grim outlook across the board

May 14, 2026 — More than 800 researchers and conservationists gathered in Colombo, Sri Lanka’s capital, from May 4-8 for Sharks International, the world’s largest shark conference.

Presenters shared research and insights on the global trade in sharks, the plight of rays, and a range of conservation measures, including rewilding initiatives, improving marine protected area effectiveness, and the bolstering of monitoring and enforcement systems to protect threatened species.

Overfishing has halved shark and ray populations since 1970. Today, more than a third of species are threatened with extinction.

Meat trade comes into focus

Scientists from around the world debuted new research on the trade in shark and ray meat, a major driver of fishing pressure.

For years, the meat trade flew under the radar as attention centered on fins, pound for pound the most valuable part of the shark. But overall, the meat trade is actually worth more, valued at $2.6 billion from 2012-2019, versus $1.5 billion for the fin trade, according to a 2021 WWF report.

Researchers from Dalhousie University in Canada shared preliminary findings from a big-data project aimed at understanding which species of sharks and rays, collectively known as elasmobranchs, are being landed and where they are traded.

These dynamics have largely eluded researchers, as the commodity codes governing the trade allow shipments to be labeled merely as “shark” or “ray.” Moreover, only 29% of shark and ray landing data that countries share with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations is reported to species level, according to the researchers.

The Dalhousie project, “Uncovering the Global Shark Meat Trade,” plans to publish species-level estimates for landings and trade flows by country in an upcoming paper for Science, now under peer review.

Among the more surprising findings: the U.S. is a major ray exporter; South Korea is the largest elasmobranch importer on the strength of its appetite for skates, a type of ray; and India, Indonesia and Mexico are the largest apparent consumers of elasmobranch meat.

The paper will also indicate which countries are underreporting landings, according to project leader Aaron MacNeil.

“More than 50% of the underreporting of species that happens to FAO happens just with five countries … Nigeria, Japan, Indonesia, China and Argentina,” MacNeil said during a talk at the conference.

Read the full article at Mongabay

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