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What is the context of this research?

Our team has obtained 3,000 BRUV data sets across 4 regions, providing incredible insights into the behavior and abundance of sharks. To truly understand their ecological roles and affect conservation at a global scale, a much larger project is needed. Each sampling site is critical to the effort, and we're looking to fund the equipment, boat rental and fuel to sample one critical coral reef site and obtain 100 BRUV deployments.

We'll use the survey data to model what factors drive reef elasmobranch density and diversity. Next, we'll identify global hotspots and highlight the differences between pristine and impacted sites for all habitat types. Finally, we'll test for correlations between density and community structure to assess the global ecological impacts of elasmobranchs.

What is the significance of this project?

Large shark species have faced 70-90% declines in the last few decades, due mainly to fishing and habitat loss. Recent estimates suggest that approximately 100 million sharks are killed every year. Populations of many species of rays haven't faired much better.

Humankind is poorly equipped to reverse these declines because we have a limited understanding of this ancient group of animals. We need to learn more about the status of reef shark populations and to understand how vital sharks are to the health of coral reefs, which provide important habitat to myriad species and incredible economic and social values to people.

Scientists have addressed these questions using a range of methods, Global FinPrint Project's method allows researchers to have the sharks catch themselves - on camera.

What are the goals of the project?

This project aims to consolidate our team's existing and newly collected BRUV data into a single analysis, producing the first globally standard survey of elasmobranch density and diversity over the world's continental and insular shelves, focusing on coral reef ecosystems.

We aim to quantify the major human pressures and environmental factors influencing shark and ray populations and to investigate their potentially critical role in coral reef ecosystems from ecological and economic standpoints, to ultimately inform and drive regional and global elasmobranch conservation efforts.

These analyses would enable us to predict density, diversity and species composition of unsampled areas on a regional, multiregional or global scale, depending on the number of regions included.

