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Beware of Sharkless Waters - The New Yorker The hundred million we are estimated to kill may be an undercount: they are fished for shark-fin soup, for shark-liver oil, for cartilage to be transformed into neat little capsules of supplements
Sharks Are in Trouble - Marine Conservation Institute The shark-finning trade continues to grow and accounts for an astounding 17 million shark deaths every year-almost 47,000 sharks every day of the year, almost 2,000 each hour [6] In particular, because so many shark species are slow-growing, the survival of juvenile sharks heavily influences population growth
Opinion | The Death of Sharks - The New York Times Humans kill 73 million sharks every year, nearly all for consumption, mainly in shark fin soup The fins are cut off and the bodies dumped overboard, a barbaric practice known as finning
Save Our Seas 2. 0 Act becomes law in US - Food Packaging Forum The new bill builds on a first version of the Save Our Seas Act passed in 2018 Since then, various drafts have been discussed in an attempt to reach an agreement on expanding the bill (FPF reported ), and calls have been growing for the US to take concrete steps for improving its waste management and recycling infrastructure (FPF reported )
Fighting for Reef Fish - Save Our Seas Magazine In the effort to protect our oceans, the Save Our Seas Foundation funds and supports research, conservation and education projects worldwide, focusing primarily on charismatic threatened wildlife and their habitats Registered international not-for-profit foundation in Switzerland (Reg No: 081 351 201 | IDE: CHE-110 230 312)
Sharks Are Dying by the Millions: But Not the Way You Think Although sharks often evoke fear in humans, they have far greater reason to fear us Nearly one-third of shark species worldwide are at risk of extinction, primarily due to fishing practices A research team led by scientists at UC Santa Barbara has found that simply requiring the release of captured sharks will not be enough to halt their