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ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil 2000 57(3):669-676; doi:10.1006/jmsc.2000.0711
© 2000 by ICES/CIEM International Council for the Exploration of the Sea/Conseil International pour l'Exploration de la Mer
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Assessing and protecting endangered marine species

Howard Powles, Michael J. Bradford, R. G. Bradford, W. G. Doubleday, S. Innes and Colin D. Levings

Fisheries and Oceans 200 Kent Street, Ottawa (Ontario), Canada K1A 0E6
Fisheries and Oceans/Cooperative Resource Management Institute, School of Resource and Environmental Management, Simon Fraser University Burnaby (British Columbia), Canada V5A 1S6
Fisheries and Oceans, Diadromous Fish Division PO Box 1006, Dartmouth (Nova Scotia), Canada B2Y 4A2
Fresh Water Institute, 501 University Crescent Winnipeg (Manitoba), Canada R3T 2N6
Fisheries and Oceans, West Vancouver Laboratory 4160 Marine Drive, West Vancouver (British Columbia), Canada V7V 1N6

[tel: +1 613 990 0279; fax: +1 613 954 0807; e-mail: powlesh{at}dfo-mpo.gc.ca]

Documented extinctions of marine and anadromous species are rare, but extinction of species and extirpation of major populations have occurred – there are cases of near extinction – and there may be undocumented extinctions. Factors associated with known extinctions and near extinctions include specific life-history characteristics (e.g. low fecundity, high age at maturity, low mobility), habitat degradation, high value and high susceptibility to harvesting, ecological specialization. Harvesting mortality, targeted or incidental, is implicated in some known extinctions or near extinctions, and may act synergistically with other threats. Criteria to make assessments of risk of extinction more consistent have been developed, but given the limited experience to date with extinctions in the marine environment there have been questions about applying these to some marine species. The wide range of life history characteristics in marine species suggests that a range of approaches to assessing extinction risk will be needed. Protocols for defining significant population units are also required since protection of populations is part of protecting endangered species. Keeping species and populations well away from endangered status should be the main goal of conservation programmes. Implementation of precautionary conservation frameworks for exploited species could be a sound approach to preventing "endangerment".

Keywords: anadromous species, endangered, extinction, extirpation, marine species, threatened, vulnerable


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