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Featured researches published by Shelley Clarke.


Conservation Genetics | 2005

Global-scale genetic identification of hammerhead sharks: Application to assessment of the international fin trade and law enforcement

Debra L. Abercrombie; Shelley Clarke; Mahmood S. Shivji

The future status of sharks is an issue of widespread conservation concern due to declines in many species in the face of high levels of exploitation to satisfy market demands for products, especially fins. Substantial declines in the large-bodied hammerhead sharks, Sphyrna lewini, S. mokarran and S. zygaena, even in regions where some management occurs, indicate that informed conservation measures are warranted for these circumglobally distributed species. Despite the importance of assessing shark catch and trade on a species-specific basis to detect potential overexploitation of individual species, achieving this goal for hammerheads has proven elusive due to difficulties in identification of their products. Here, we present the development and application of a diagnostic, streamlined, five-primer multiplex polymerase chain reaction assay utilizing species-specific primers based on nuclear ribosomal ITS2 for the three hammerhead species throughout their global distribution. Application of this assay to investigations of the fin market confirmed the presence of hammerhead fins in the international trade. A study of the world’s largest fin market in Hong Kong revealed a high concordance between specific Chinese-name trade categories and fins from these three species (“Bai Chun” with S. lewini, “Gui Chun” with S. zygaena and “Gu Pian” with S.␣mokarran), and clear species preferences. This concordance information allows the use of market records for monitoring species-specific trends in trade and exploitation rates. The assay is also proving useful for identification of shark body parts in U.S. fisheries law-enforcement activities. Screening of morphologically identified “ S. lewini” from globally distributed areas using this assay with subsequent whole ITS2 sequencing suggests a cryptic species closely related to S. lewini occurs off the SE USA coast.


Fisheries Science | 2006

Filtering method for obtaining stock indices by shark species from species-combined logbook data in tuna longline fisheries

Hideki Nakano; Shelley Clarke

A method of filtering logbook data to obtain estimates of catch per unit effort (CPUE) for sharks has been proposed which simultaneously addresses the issues of under-reporting and the lack of species-specific catch records in historical data. Logbook catch data from vessels with high shark reporting rates are used to represent catch rates for the abundant blue shark Prionace glauca and low reporting vessels data are used for the main commercially valuable species, the shortfin mako Isurus oxyrinchus. Logbook reporting rate filter (RRF) levels are evaluated through analytical and model-based comparisons to species-specific logbook records available since 1994 and shipboard observer data. At the high reporting rates, the ≥80% filter avoids large numbers of false zeros and provides the best fit to observer data for blue shark. At the low reporting rates, the <40% filter best matches the observer data for makos, but this filter level includes large numbers of false zeros and sharks of other species. The ≤20% filter produces a dataset that is better targeted to mako catches but considerably under-estimates CPUE relative to observer records. For these reasons, other means of estimating mako catch rates are suggested for further research.


Aquatic Conservation-marine and Freshwater Ecosystems | 2008

You can swim but you can't hide : the global status and conservation of oceanic pelagic sharks and rays

Nicholas K. Dulvy; Julia K. Baum; Shelley Clarke; Sonja V. Fordham; Malcolm P. Francis; Claudine Gibson; Alen Soldo; John D. Stevens; Sarah Valenti; Shark Alliance


Ecology Letters | 2006

Global Estimates of Shark Catches Using Trade Records From Commercial Markets

Shelley Clarke; Murdoch K. McAllister; E. J. Milner-Gulland; Geoffrey P. Kirkwood; Catherine G.J. Michielsens; David J. Agnew; Ellen K. Pikitch; Hideki Nakano; Mahmood S. Shivji


Conservation Biology | 2006

Identification of shark species composition and proportion in the hong kong shark fin market based on molecular genetics and trade records

Shelley Clarke; Jennifer E. Magnussen; Debra L. Abercrombie; Murdoch K. Mcallister; Mahmood S. Shivji


Conservation Biology | 2002

Genetic Identification of Pelagic Shark Body Parts for Conservation and Trade Monitoring

Mahmood S. Shivji; Shelley Clarke; Melissa Pank; Lisa J. Natanson; Nancy E. Kohler; Michael J. Stanhope


Marine Policy | 2008

Shark interactions in pelagic longline fisheries

Eric Gilman; Shelley Clarke; Joanna Alfaro-Shigueto; John W. Mandelman; Jeffrey C. Mangel; Samantha Petersen; Susanna Piovano; Nicola Thomson; Paul Dalzell; Miguel Donoso; Meidad Goren; Tim Werner


Animal Conservation | 2007

Genetic tracking of basking shark products in international trade

J. E. Magnussen; Ellen K. Pikitch; Shelley Clarke; C. Nicholson; A. R. Hoelzel; Mahmood S. Shivji


Archive | 2007

Shark depredation and unwanted bycatch in Pelagic longline fisheries: industry practices and attitudes, and shark avoidance strategies

Eric Gilman; Paul Dalzell; M Goren; T Werner; Shelley Clarke; Joanna Alfaro-Shigueto; John W. Mandelman; Jeffrey C. Mangel; Samantha Petersen; Susanna Piovano; N Thomson


Aquatic Living Resources | 2008

Use of shark fin trade data to estimate historic total shark removals in the Atlantic Ocean

Shelley Clarke

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Hideki Nakano

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Mahmood S. Shivji

Nova Southeastern University

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Murdoch K. McAllister

University of British Columbia

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Eric Gilman

Hawaii Pacific University

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Paul Dalzell

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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