80_FR_48215 80 FR 48061 - Endangered and Threatened Wildlife; 90-day Finding on a Petition To List the Bigeye Thresher Shark as Threatened or Endangered Under the Endangered Species Act

80 FR 48061 - Endangered and Threatened Wildlife; 90-day Finding on a Petition To List the Bigeye Thresher Shark as Threatened or Endangered Under the Endangered Species Act

DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 154 (August 11, 2015)

Page Range48061-48069
FR Document2015-19551

We, NMFS, announce the 90-day finding on a petition to list the bigeye thresher shark (Alopias superciliosus) range-wide, or in the alternative, as one or more distinct population segments (DPSs) identified by the petitioners as endangered or threatened under the U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA). We find that the petition presents substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted for the species worldwide. Accordingly, we will initiate a status review of bigeye thresher shark range-wide at this time. To ensure that the status review is comprehensive, we are soliciting scientific and commercial information regarding this species.

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 154 (Tuesday, August 11, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 154 (Tuesday, August 11, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 48061-48069]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-19551]


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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Parts 223 and 224

[Docket No. 150506426-5426-01]
RIN 0648-XD942


Endangered and Threatened Wildlife; 90-day Finding on a Petition 
To List the Bigeye Thresher Shark as Threatened or Endangered Under the 
Endangered Species Act

AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.

ACTION: 90-day petition finding, request for information, and 
initiation of status review.

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SUMMARY: We, NMFS, announce the 90-day finding on a petition to list 
the bigeye thresher shark (Alopias superciliosus) range-wide, or in the 
alternative, as one or more distinct population segments (DPSs) 
identified by the petitioners as endangered or threatened under the 
U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA). We find that the petition presents 
substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that the 
petitioned action may be warranted for the species worldwide. 
Accordingly, we will initiate a status review of bigeye thresher shark 
range-wide at this time. To ensure that the status review is 
comprehensive, we are soliciting scientific and commercial information 
regarding this species.

DATES: Information and comments on the subject action must be received 
by October 13, 2015.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, information, or data, identified by 
``NOAA-NMFS-2015-0089'' by any one of the following methods:
     Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public 
comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal. Go to www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2015-0089. Click the ``Comment Now'' icon, 
complete the required fields, and enter or attach your comments.
     Mail or hand-delivery: Office of Protected Resources, 
NMFS, 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910.
    Instructions: You must submit comments by one of the above methods 
to ensure that we receive, document, and consider them. Comments sent 
by any other method, to any other address or individual, or received 
after the end of the comment period, may not be considered. All 
comments received are a part of the public record and will generally be 
posted for public viewing on http://www.regulations.gov without change. 
All personal identifying information (e.g., name, address, etc.), 
confidential business information, or otherwise sensitive information 
submitted voluntarily by the sender will be publicly accessible. We 
will accept anonymous comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if 
you wish to remain anonymous). Attachments to electronic comments will 
be accepted in Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF file formats only

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Chelsey Young, NMFS, Office of 
Protected Resources (301) 427-8491.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Background

    On April 27, 2015, we received a petition from Defenders of 
Wildlife requesting that we list the bigeye thresher shark (Alopias 
superciliosus) as endangered or threatened under the ESA, or, in the 
alternative, to list one or more distinct population segments (DPSs), 
should we find they exist, as threatened or endangered under the ESA. 
Defenders of Wildlife also requested that critical habitat be 
designated for this species in U.S. waters concurrent with final ESA 
listing. The petition states that the bigeye thresher shark merits 
listing as an endangered or threatened species under the ESA because of 
the following: (1) The species faces threats from historical and 
continued fishing for both commercial and recreational purposes; (2) 
life history characteristics and limited ability to recover from 
fishing pressure make the species particularly vulnerable to 
overexploitation; and (3) regulations are inadequate to protect the 
bigeye thresher shark.

ESA Statutory Provisions and Policy Considerations

    Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the ESA of 1973, as amended (U.S.C. 1531 et 
seq.), requires, to the maximum extent practicable, that within 90 days 
of receipt of a petition to list a species as threatened or endangered, 
the Secretary of Commerce make a finding on whether that petition 
presents substantial scientific or commercial information indicating 
that the petitioned action may be warranted, and promptly publish the 
finding in the Federal Register (16 U.S.C. 1533(b)(3)(A)). When we find 
that substantial scientific or commercial information in a petition and 
in our files indicates the petitioned action may be warranted (a 
``positive 90-day finding''), we are required to promptly commence a 
review of the status of the species concerned, which includes 
conducting a comprehensive review of the best available scientific and 
commercial information. Within 12 months of receiving the petition, we 
must conclude the review with a finding as to whether, in fact, the 
petitioned action is warranted. Because the finding at the 12-month 
stage is based on a significantly more thorough review of the available 
information, a ``may be warranted'' finding at the 90-day stage does 
not prejudge the outcome of the status review.
    Under the ESA, a listing determination may address a ``species,'' 
which is defined to also include subspecies and, for any vertebrate 
species, any DPS that interbreeds when mature (16 U.S.C. 1532(16)). A 
joint NMFS-U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) policy clarifies the 
agencies' interpretation of the phrase ``distinct population segment'' 
for the purposes of listing, delisting, and reclassifying a species 
under the ESA (``DPS Policy''; 61 FR 4722; February 7, 1996). A 
species, subspecies, or DPS is ``endangered'' if it is in danger of 
extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range, and 
``threatened'' if it is likely to become endangered within the 
foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range 
(ESA sections 3(6) and 3(20), respectively; 16 U.S.C. 1532(6) and 
(20)). Pursuant to the ESA and our implementing regulations, the 
determination of whether a species is threatened or endangered shall be 
based on any one or a combination of the following five section 4(a)(1) 
factors: The present or threatened destruction, modification, or 
curtailment of habitat or range; overutilization for commercial, 
recreational, scientific, or educational purposes; disease or 
predation; inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; and any other 
natural or manmade factors affecting the species' existence (16 U.S.C. 
1533(a)(1), 50 CFR 424.11(c)).
    ESA-implementing regulations issued jointly by NMFS and USFWS (50 
CFR 424.14(b)) define ``substantial information'' in the context of 
reviewing a petition to list, delist, or reclassify a species as the 
amount of information that would lead a reasonable person to

[[Page 48062]]

believe that the measure proposed in the petition may be warranted. 
When evaluating whether substantial information is contained in a 
petition, we must consider whether the petition: (1) Clearly indicates 
the administrative measure recommended and gives the scientific and any 
common name of the species involved; (2) contains detailed narrative 
justification for the recommended measure, describing, based on 
available information, past and present numbers and distribution of the 
species involved and any threats faced by the species; (3) provides 
information regarding the status of the species over all or a 
significant portion of its range; and (4) is accompanied by the 
appropriate supporting documentation in the form of bibliographic 
references, reprints of pertinent publications, copies of reports or 
letters from authorities, and maps (50 CFR 424.14(b)(2)).
    At the 90-day stage, we evaluate the petitioner's request based 
upon the information in the petition, including its references, and the 
information readily available in our files. We do not conduct 
additional research, and we do not solicit information from parties 
outside the agency to help us in evaluating the petition. We will 
accept the petitioner's sources and characterizations of the 
information presented, if they appear to be based on accepted 
scientific principles, unless we have specific information in our files 
that indicates the petition's information is incorrect, unreliable, 
obsolete, or otherwise irrelevant to the requested action. Information 
that is susceptible to more than one interpretation or that is 
contradicted by other available information will not be dismissed at 
the 90-day finding stage, so long as it is reliable and a reasonable 
person would conclude that it supports the petitioner's assertions. 
Conclusive information indicating the species may meet the ESA's 
requirements for listing is not required to make a positive 90-day 
finding. We will not conclude that a lack of specific information alone 
negates a positive 90-day finding, if a reasonable person would 
conclude that the unknown information itself suggests an extinction 
risk of concern for the species at issue.
    To make a 90-day finding on a petition to list a species, we 
evaluate whether the petition presents substantial scientific or 
commercial information indicating the subject species may be either 
threatened or endangered, as defined by the ESA. First, we evaluate 
whether the information presented in the petition, along with the 
information readily available in our files, indicates that the 
petitioned entity constitutes a ``species'' eligible for listing under 
the ESA. Next, we evaluate whether the information indicates that the 
species at issue faces extinction risk that is cause for concern; this 
may be indicated in information expressly discussing the species' 
status and trends, or in information describing impacts and threats to 
the species. We evaluate any information on specific demographic 
factors pertinent to evaluating extinction risk for the species at 
issue (e.g., population abundance and trends, productivity, spatial 
structure, age structure, sex ratio, diversity, current and historical 
range, habitat integrity or fragmentation), and the potential 
contribution of identified demographic risks to extinction risk for the 
species. We then evaluate the potential links between these demographic 
risks and the causative impacts and threats identified in ESA section 
4(a)(1).
    Information presented on impacts or threats should be specific to 
the species and should reasonably suggest that one or more of these 
factors may be operative threats that act or have acted on the species 
to the point that it may warrant protection under the ESA. Broad 
statements about generalized threats to the species, or identification 
of factors that could negatively impact a species, do not constitute 
substantial information that listing may be warranted. We look for 
information indicating that not only is the particular species exposed 
to a factor, but that the species may be responding in a negative 
fashion; then we assess the potential significance of that negative 
response.
    Many petitions identify risk classifications made by non-
governmental organizations, such as the International Union for the 
Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the American Fisheries Society, or 
NatureServe, as evidence of extinction risk for a species. Risk 
classifications by other organizations or made under other Federal or 
state statutes may be informative, but such classification alone may 
not provide the rationale for a positive 90-day finding under the ESA. 
For example, as explained by NatureServe, their assessments of a 
species' conservation status do ``not constitute a recommendation by 
NatureServe for listing under the U.S. Endangered Species Act'' because 
NatureServe assessments ``have different criteria, evidence 
requirements, purposes and taxonomic coverage than government lists of 
endangered and threatened species, and therefore these two types of 
lists should not be expected to coincide'' (http://www.natureserve.org/prodServices/pdf/NatureServeStatusAssessmentsListing-Dec%202008.pdf). 
Thus, when a petition cites such classifications, we will evaluate the 
source of information that the classification is based upon in light of 
the standards on extinction risk and impacts or threats discussed 
above.

Species Description

Distribution

    The bigeye thresher shark (Alopias superciliosus) is a large, 
highly migratory oceanic and coastal species of shark found throughout 
the world in tropical and temperate seas. In the Western Atlantic 
(including the Gulf of Mexico), bigeye threshers can be found off the 
Atlantic coast of the United States (from New York to Florida), and in 
the Gulf of Mexico off Florida, Mississippi and Texas. They can also be 
found in Mexico (from Veracruz to Yucatan), Bahamas, Cuba, Venezuela, 
as well as central and southern Brazil. In the Eastern Atlantic, bigeye 
threshers are found from Portugal to the Western Cape of South Africa, 
including the western and central Mediterranean Sea. In the Indian 
Ocean, bigeye threshers are found in South Africa (Eastern Cape and 
KwaZulu-Natal), Madagascar, Arabian Sea (Somalia), Gulf of Aden, 
Maldives, and Sri Lanka. In the Pacific Ocean, from West to East, 
bigeye threshers are known from southern Japan (including Okinawa), 
Taiwan (Province of China), Vietnam, between the Northern Mariana 
Islands and Wake Island, down to the northwestern coast of Australia 
and New Zealand. Moving to the Central Pacific, bigeye threshers are 
known from the area between Wake, Marshall, Howland and Baker, Palmyra, 
Johnston, Hawaiian Islands, Line Islands, and between Marquesas and 
Galapagos Islands. Finally, in the Eastern Pacific, bigeye threshers 
occur from Canada to Mexico (Gulf of California) and west of Galapagos 
Islands (Ecuador). They are also possibly found off Peru and northern 
Chile (Compagno, 2001).

Physical Characteristics

    The bigeye thresher shark possesses an elongated upper caudal lobe 
almost equal to its body length, which is unique to the Alopiidae 
family. It has a broad head, a moderately long and bulbous snout, 
curved yet broad-tipped pectoral fins, distinctive grooves on the head 
above the gills, and large teeth. The first dorsal fin mid base is 
closer to the pelvic-fin bases than to the pectoral-fin bases. The 
caudal tip is broad with a wide terminal lobe. While some of the above 
characteristics may be shared by

[[Page 48063]]

other thresher shark species, diagnostic features separating this 
species from the other two thresher shark species (common thresher, A. 
vulpinus, and pelagic thresher, A. pelagicus) are their extremely large 
eyes, which extend onto the dorsal surface of the head, and the 
prominent notches that run dorso-lateral from behind the eyes to behind 
the gills. The body can be purplish grey or grey-brown on the upper 
surface and sides, with grey to white coloring on its underside (light 
color of abdomen does not extend over pectoral fin bases like common 
thresher) and no white dot on upper pectoral fin tips like those often 
seen in common threshers (Compagno 2001).

Habitat

    Bigeye thresher sharks are found in a diverse spectrum of 
locations, including coastal waters over continental shelves, on the 
high seas in the epipelagic zone far from land, in deep waters near the 
bottom on continental slopes, and sometimes in shallow inshore waters. 
They are an epipelagic, neritic, and epibenthic shark, ranging from the 
surface and in the intertidal to at least 500 m deep, but mostly below 
100 m depth. In our files, we found information indicating that bigeye 
threshers prefer an optimum swimming depth of 240-360 m, water 
temperature of 10-16 [deg]C, salinity of 34.5-34.7 ppt, and dissolved 
oxygen range between 3.0-4.0 ml/l (Cao et al., 2011).

Feeding Ecology

    Bigeye threshers feed on small to medium sized pelagic fishes 
(e.g., lancetfishes, herring, mackerel and small billfishes), bottom 
fishes (e.g., hake), and cephalopods (e.g., squids). Thresher sharks 
are unique in that they use their tail in a whip-like fashion to 
disorient and incapacitate their prey prior to consumption (Oliver, 
2013). The arrangement of the eyes, with keyhole-shaped orbits 
extending onto the dorsal surface of the head, suggest that this 
species has a dorsal/vertical binocular field of vision (unlike other 
threshers), which may be related to fixating on prey and striking them 
with its tail from below (FAO 2015 species fact sheet).

Life History

    Bigeye thresher sharks have an estimated lifespan of approximately 
20-21 years and a maximum total length of about 4.6 m. Maturity in 
bigeye threshers occurs at 7-13 years and 275-300 cm total length (TL) 
for males and 8-15 years and 290-341cm (TL) for females. Bigeye 
threshers have low reproductive capacity of only 2-4 pups per litter 
(Chen et al., 1997; Compagno, 2001; Moreno and Mor[oacute]n, 1992) and 
a long gestation period of 12 months, although this remains uncertain 
due to a lack of birthing seasonality data (Liu et al., 1998). They 
(like all thresher sharks) are ovoviviparous and oophagous (developing 
embryo in uteri eat unfertilized eggs produced by the ovary). Size at 
birth for the bigeye thresher ranges from 64-106 cm TL (Gilmore, 1993), 
but a mating season has not yet been identified. Bigeye threshers have 
the slowest population growth rate of all thresher sharks, with an 
exceptionally low potential annual rate of population increase (0.02; 
IUCN; [lambda]=1.009 yr-1, Cort[eacute]s, 2009).

Analysis of Petition and Information Readily Available in NMFS Files

    Below we evaluate the information provided in the petition and 
readily available in our files to determine if the petition presents 
substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that an 
endangered or threatened listing may be warranted as a result of any of 
the factors listed under section 4(a)(1) of the ESA. If requested to 
list a global population or, alternatively, a DPS, we first determine 
if the petition presents substantial information that the petitioned 
action is warranted for the global population. If it does, then we make 
a positive finding on the petition and conduct a review of the species 
range-wide. If after this review we find that the species does not 
warrant listing range-wide, then we will consider whether the 
populations requested by the petition qualify as DPSs and warrant 
listing. If the petition does not present substantial information that 
the global population may warrant listing, but it has requested that we 
list any distinct populations of the species as threatened or 
endangered, then we consider whether the petition provides substantial 
information that the requested population(s) may qualify as DPSs under 
the discreteness and significance criteria of our joint DPS Policy, and 
if listing any of those DPSs may be warranted. We summarize our 
analysis and conclusions regarding the information presented by the 
petitioners and in our files on the specific ESA section 4(a)(1) 
factors that we find may be affecting the species' risk of global 
extinction below.

Bigeye Thresher Shark Status and Trends

    The petition does not provide a population abundance estimate for 
bigeye thresher sharks, but points to its ``vulnerable'' status on the 
IUCN Red List. The petition asserts that a global decline of bigeye 
thresher sharks has been caused mainly by commercial and recreational 
fishing (both direct harvest and bycatch), as evidenced by substantial 
population declines in every area where sufficient historical and 
current population data exist. In the Northwest and Western Central 
Atlantic, the petition cites an 80 percent decline in bigeye thresher 
sharks since the early 2000s, with an estimated average overall decline 
of 63 percent since the beginning of data collection in 1986. In the 
Southwest Atlantic, the petition describes the popularity of bigeye 
threshers in the Brazilian Santos longline fishery, and asserts that 
some vessels are directly targeting this species specifically for its 
fins. The petition also describes consistent gradual decreases in catch 
per unit effort (CPUE) for this species in the region. The petition 
describes likely declines of bigeye thresher sharks in the 
Mediterranean based on declines of other pelagic shark species, 
including congener A. vulpinus, due to high fishing pressure. In the 
Indo-West Pacific, the petition cites the prevalence of finning 
activities, including both legal and extensive illegal directed shark 
catch in this region, and states that the bigeye thresher in particular 
is preferentially retained in certain fisheries. In the Eastern Central 
Pacific, the petition cites 83 percent declines in thresher populations 
when compared to research surveys from the 1950s. Finally, the petition 
points to increased interest in recreational fishing of the bigeye 
thresher shark, with the potential for high post-release mortality. The 
petition does not provide information on abundance estimates across the 
global range of the species.
    The last IUCN assessment of the bigeye thresher shark was completed 
in 2009, and several estimates of global and subpopulation trends and 
status have been made and are described in the following text. In the 
Northwest Atlantic, declines in relative abundance cited by the 
petitioner were derived from analyses of logbook data, reported in Baum 
et al., (2003) and Cort[eacute]s (2007). The former study analyzed 
logbook data for the U.S. pelagic longline fleets targeting swordfish 
and tunas in the Northwest Atlantic, and reported an 80 percent decline 
in relative abundance for thresher sharks (common and bigeye threshers 
combined) from 1986 to 2000. The latter study reported a 63 percent 
decline of thresher sharks (at the genus level) based on logbook data, 
occurring between 1986 and 2006 (Cort[eacute]s, 2007). However, the 
observer index data from the same study (Cort[eacute]s, 2007) shows an

[[Page 48064]]

opposite trend in relative abundance, with a 28 percent increase of 
threshers in the Northwest Atlantic since 1992. Logbook data over the 
same period (1992-2006) shows a 50 percent decline in thresher sharks. 
The logbook dataset is the largest available for the western North 
Atlantic Ocean, but the observer dataset is generally more reliable in 
terms of consistent identification and reporting. According to observer 
data, relative abundance of thresher sharks (again, only at the genus 
level) in the western North Atlantic Ocean appears to have stabilized 
or even be increasing since the late 1990s (Cort[eacute]s, 2007). A 
more recent analysis using logbook data between 1996 and 2005 provides 
some supporting evidence that the abundance of thresher sharks has 
potentially stabilized over this time period (Baum and Blanchard, 
2010). However, it should be noted that fishing pressure on thresher 
sharks began over two decades prior to the start of this time series; 
thus, the estimated declines are not from virgin biomass. Furthermore, 
the sample size in the latter observer analysis was also very small 
compared to the previous logbook analyses, which both showed declines. 
Thus, abundance trend estimates derived from standardized catch rate 
indices of the U.S. pelagic longline fishery suggest that thresher 
sharks (both bigeye and common) have likely undergone a decline in 
abundance in this region. However, the conflicting evidence between 
logbook and observer data showing opposite trends in thresher shark 
abundance cannot be fully resolved at this time. Data are not available 
in the petition or in our own files to assess the trend in population 
abundance in this region since 2006, or to assess the trend specific to 
the bigeye thresher shark. Because the logbook data from this region 
show consistent evidence of a significant and continued decline in 
thresher sharks, we must consider this information in our 90-day 
determination. Additionally, in the Southeastern United States, studies 
show significant declines in the species, with decreases in CPUE 
indicating that the population of A. superciliosus has declined by 70 
percent from historical levels (Beerkircher et al., 2002).
    For the Northeast Atlantic, there are no population abundance 
estimates available, but data indicate that the species is taken in 
driftnets and gillnets. In the Mediterranean Sea, estimates show 
significant declines in thresher shark abundance during the past two 
decades, reflecting data up to 2006. According to historical data 
compiled using a generalized linear model, thresher sharks have 
declined between 96 and 99 percent in abundance and biomass in the 
Mediterranean Sea (Ferretti et al., 2008). Overall, the bigeye thresher 
shark has been poorly documented in the Mediterranean and is considered 
scarce or rare.
    In the Eastern Central Pacific, logbook data show a historical 
decline of thresher sharks due to pelagic fishing fleet operations. 
Trends in abundance and biomass of thresher sharks in the eastern 
tropical Pacific Ocean were estimated by comparison of pelagic longline 
research surveys in the 1950s with recent data (1990s); these data were 
collected by observers on pelagic longline fishing vessels and 
standardized to account for differences in depth and soak time. This 
analysis estimated a decline in combined thresher abundance of 83 
percent and a decline in biomass to approximately 5 percent of virgin 
levels (Ward and Myers, 2005).
    In other areas of the world, estimates of thresher shark abundance 
are limited. Bigeye threshers are recorded in the catches of fisheries 
operating in the Indo-West Pacific, but catches of the species are 
likely very under-reported. An analysis of purse seine and longline 
observer data from the Western and Central Pacific produced no clear 
catch trends for thresher sharks (Alopias spp.); however, shark data 
from observer data sets are constrained by a lack of observer coverage, 
particularly for the North Pacific, and for the purse seine fishery by 
the physical practicalities of onboard sampling (Clarke, 2011). 
Additionally, this study detected a significant decrease in median size 
for thresher sharks in tropical areas, most likely reflective of trends 
in bigeye threshers as they are the most commonly encountered species 
in this region. While catch data are incomplete and cannot be used to 
estimate abundance levels or determine the magnitude of catches or 
trends for bigeye threshers at this time, pelagic fishing effort in 
this region is high, with reported increases in recent years (IUCN 
assessment, 2009).
    In conclusion, across the species' global range we find evidence 
suggesting that population abundance of the bigeye thresher shark is 
declining or, in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean, may be stable at a 
diminished abundance. While data are still limited with respect to 
population size and trends, we find the petition and our files 
sufficient in presenting substantial information on bigeye thresher 
shark abundance, trends, or status to indicate the petitioned action 
may be warranted.

ESA Section 4(a)(1) Factors

    The petition indicated three main categories of threats to the 
bigeye thresher shark: overutilization for commercial, recreational, 
scientific, or educational purposes; the inadequacy of existing 
regulatory mechanisms; and other natural or manmade factors affecting 
its continued existence. We discuss each of these below based on 
information in the petition, and the information readily available in 
our files.

Overutilization for Commercial, Recreational, Scientific, or 
Educational Purposes

    The petition states that ``the bigeye thresher has shown 
substantial population declines in every area where sufficient 
historical and current population data exists'' and lists four 
categories of overutilization: historical, directed, incidental, and 
recreational. The petition describes historical exploitation as the 
first category of overutilization for the species, predominantly in the 
Northwest and Central Atlantic and Eastern Central Pacific. In the 
Northwest and Central Atlantic, bigeye threshers were historically 
caught in pelagic longline fisheries. Bigeye threshers have been a 
prohibited species in all commercial fisheries in the U.S. Atlantic 
since 2000. Since these regulations became effective in 2000, relative 
abundance of thresher sharks (again, only at the genus level) in the 
western North Atlantic Ocean appears to have stabilized or even be 
increasing since the late 1990s (Baum and Blanchard, 2010; 
Cort[eacute]s, 2007). However, it should be noted that bigeye threshers 
are still caught as bycatch and occasionally landed in the Northwest 
Atlantic Ocean despite its prohibited status (NMFS, 2012; 2013), which 
may hinder the ability of the population to rebound from the historical 
declines.
    As previously mentioned, the petition also states that logbook data 
from the Eastern Central Pacific shows a historical decline of bigeye 
thresher sharks due to pelagic fishing fleet operations known to take 
this species. Trends in abundance and biomass of thresher sharks in the 
eastern tropical Pacific Ocean were estimated by comparison of pelagic 
longline research surveys in the 1950s with recent data (1990s); these 
data were collected by observers on pelagic longline fishing vessels 
and standardized to account for differences in depth and soak time. For 
example, in the 1990's, longliners deployed more hooks (averaging 2240 
hooks per day compared to 322 hooks in the 1950s) over a wider depth 
range

[[Page 48065]]

(down to 600 m compared to 200 m) for longer periods. Thus, while 
catches of thresher sharks increased (from 112 threshers in the 1950s 
survey to 511 threshers in the 1990s survey), this analysis estimated a 
decline in combined thresher abundance of 83 percent, with a decline in 
mean biomass to approximately 5 percent of virgin levels and a decline 
in mean body mass from 17 kg to 12 kg). While this analysis was not 
species-specific (Ward and Myers, 2005), we must consider this 
information in our 90-day finding given the potential significant 
population decline of bigeye threshers in this region.
    In addition to broad commercial harvest of the species, the 
petition states that direct catch related to the shark fin trade has 
resulted in population decline, and that bigeye thresher sharks are 
targeted and preferentially retained for their fins. For example, the 
petition stated in the Indo-West Pacific, a single thresher fin can 
fetch US $250, creating incentives that would drive overutilization. 
However, this statement is not entirely correct. While it is true that 
high prices are paid for thresher sharks, the value of US $250 was not 
for a single fin, but rather for the entire shark (Gilman et al., 
2007). Still, in comparison to other sharks (e.g., shortfin mako only 
fetches US $50 per shark), thresher sharks appear to be highly valued 
and consequently targeted for both their meat and fins. While the 
petition did not provide any information connecting population declines 
as a result of this direct catch, evidence suggests that the three 
thresher shark species, collectively, may account for approximately 2.3 
percent of the fins auctioned in Hong Kong, the world's largest fin-
trading center (Clarke, 2006). This translates to 0.4 million to 3.9 
million threshers that may enter the global fin trade each year 
(Clarke, 2006), with bigeye thresher having the highest value and 
vulnerability to fishing compared to the other thresher species 
(Cort[eacute]s, 2010); still, the relative proportion of each thresher 
shark species comprising the shark fin trade is not available in this 
genus-level assessment and information on the species-specific impact 
of this harvest on bigeye thresher shark abundance is not provided by 
the petitioner. However, we found species-specific evidence in our 
files that bigeye threshers may be highly utilized in the shark fin 
trade. In a genetic barcoding study of shark fins from markets in 
Taiwan, bigeye threshers were one of 20 species identified and 
comprised 0.07 percent of collected fin samples. Additionally, thresher 
sharks comprised 15 percent of fins genetically tested from markets 
throughout Indonesia (the largest shark catching country in the world), 
with bigeye threshers making up an estimated 7.6 percent of all fins 
tested. The high frequency of bigeye threshers in the markets across 
Indonesia provides some evidence that they are not just caught 
incidentally, but are targeted by large-scale fisheries (Sembiring, 
2015). In another genetic barcoding study of fins from United Arab 
Emirates, the fourth largest exporter in the world of raw dried shark 
fins to Hong Kong, the authors found that the Alopiidae family 
represented 5.9 percent of the trade from Dubai, with bigeye thresher 
comprising 2.31 percent (Jabado et al., 2015). Overall, evidence that 
bigeye thresher sharks (and threshers in general) are highly valued for 
their fins, are possibly targeted in some areas, and comprise a portion 
of the Hong Kong fin-trading auction suggests that this threat may 
impact the species.
    In the Indian Ocean, the status and abundance of shark species is 
poorly known despite a long history of research and more than 60 years 
of commercial exploitation by large-scale tuna fisheries (Romanov et 
al., 2010). Pelagic sharks, including bigeye threshers, are targeted in 
various fisheries, including semi-industrial, artisanal, and 
recreational fisheries. Countries that fish for various pelagic species 
of sharks include: Egypt, India, Iran, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, 
United Arab Emirates, and Yemen, where the probable or actual status of 
shark populations is unknown, and Maldives, Kenya, Mauritius, 
Seychelles, South Africa, and United Republic of Tanzania, where the 
actual status of shark populations is presumed to range from fully 
exploited to over-exploited (Young, 2006). In 2013, an Ecological Risk 
Assessment (ERA) was developed by the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission 
(IOTC) Scientific Committee to quantify which shark species are most at 
risk from the high levels of pelagic longline fishing pressure. In this 
ERA, the IOTC Scientific Committee noted that A. superciliosus received 
a high vulnerability ranking (No. 2) for longline gear, as the species 
is characterized as one of the least productive shark species, and is 
highly susceptible to catch in longline fisheries. The ERA also noted 
that the available evidence indicates considerable risk to the status 
of the Indian Ocean Alopias spp. stocks at current catch levels, which, 
from 2000-2011 was estimated to be 22,811 mt (Merua et al., 2013).
    Indirect catch is another category of overutilization identified by 
the petition, which states that post-release mortality may be high in 
the species. However, no information is provided in the petition to 
connect the effect of bycatch on population declines of the species. In 
the Northeast Atlantic and Mediterranean, while there are no target 
fisheries for thresher sharks, they are taken as bycatch in various 
fisheries, including the Moroccan driftnet fishery in the southwest 
Mediterranean. They are also caught by industrial and semi-industrial 
longline fisheries and by artisanal gillnet fisheries. In our files, we 
found evidence that in the last two decades, thresher sharks (common 
and bigeye) have declined between 96 and 99 percent in abundance and 
biomass in the Mediterranean Sea (Ferretti, 2008).
    Although bigeye thresher sharks have been a prohibited species in 
U.S. Atlantic commercial fisheries since 2000, they are still 
incidentally taken as bycatch on pelagic longlines and in gillnets on 
the East Coast. For example, in our files, we found that since the 
prohibition on bigeye threshers came into effect in 2000, approximately 
1,493 lbs, dressed weight (677 kg) of bigeye thresher were landed in 
the Atlantic (NMFS, 2012; 2014) despite its prohibited status. In 2010, 
the United States reported that bigeye thresher represented the second 
largest amount of dead discards in the Atlantic commercial fleet, 
reporting a total of 46 t (NOAA, 2010 Report to ICCAT). In 2011, this 
number dropped to 27 t of bigeye thresher dead discards (NOAA, 2011 
Report to ICCAT). Further, several recent reports assessing the 
vulnerability of bigeye threshers and other pelagic sharks to bycatch 
in the U.S. Atlantic pelagic longline fishery characterized the bigeye 
thresher as highly vulnerable (Cortes, 2010; Cortes, 2012; Gallagher et 
al., 2014). These landings and dead discards may be linked to declines 
in the species across the Northwest Atlantic portion of its range; 
however, as discussed earlier, conflicting logbook and observer data 
decrease the certainty of these trends (Cort[eacute]s, 2007; Baum and 
Blanchard, 2010).
    In the Southwest Atlantic Ocean, off the coast of Brazil, bigeye 
threshers represent almost 100 percent of thresher sharks caught in 
longline fisheries (Amorin, 1998). The landed catch and CPUE of bigeye 
thresher shark in this fishery increased from 1971 to 1989, and then 
gradually decreased from 1990 to 2001; however, this does not 
necessarily reflect stock abundance because changes in the depth of 
fishing operations also occurred, which may

[[Page 48066]]

have affected the time series. Thus, further information is needed to 
resolve this. In our files, we found that bigeye threshers are also 
taken in Uruguayan longline fisheries at similar levels. In one study, 
observer data from 2001-2005 recorded a total of 295 A. superciliosus 
specimens, in which the species' abundance was characterized as ``low'' 
despite high fishing effort (Berrondo et al., 2007). Further, observer 
data from 1992-2000 showed that bigeye threshers experience high 
mortality in longline fisheries in the Southwest Atlantic, with 54 
percent dead upon capture (Beerkircher et al., 2002). Given the 
declines reported in other areas for which data are available 
throughout other parts of the species' range and the high fishing 
pressure from fleets throughout the Southwest Atlantic, A. 
superciliosus may be experiencing a level of exploitation in this part 
of its range that may increase its risk of extinction.
    In the Eastern Central Pacific, the petition points to the fact 
that bigeye threshers have been recorded as bycatch in purse seine 
fleets operating in this region, in which bigeye threshers comprised 1 
percent of shark species caught during a Shark Characteristics Sampling 
Program conducted from 1994-2004 (Roman-Verdesoto and Orozco-
Z[ouml]ller, 2005). Bycatch for this report was defined as sharks that 
were discarded dead after being removed from the net and placed on the 
vessel. Since 2010, catches of thresher sharks in this fishery have 
fluctuated between 10 t and 14 t; however, in a preliminary 
productivity-susceptibility assessment, bigeye threshers were 
characterized as having a low susceptibility to this fishery (IAATC, 
2009). Complete bycatch and discard data are not readily available from 
longline fleets in the Eastern Pacific. In our files, we found that 
bigeye thresher sharks are minor components of U.S. West Coast 
fisheries, taken incidentally and presumably not overexploited, at 
least locally. The bigeye thresher occurs regularly but in low numbers, 
comprising only approximately 9 percent of common thresher catch (PFMC, 
2003). Overall, we found that apart from blue and silky sharks, there 
are no stock assessments available for shark species in the Eastern 
Pacific, and hence the impacts of bycatch on the population are unknown 
(IATTC, 2014). However, despite a lack of information regarding present 
levels of bycatch occurring in other fisheries throughout the Eastern 
Pacific, as described earlier, thresher sharks were estimated to have 
experienced an 83 percent decline in this part of the species' range as 
a result of fishing mortality in longline fisheries. Given the high 
rates of bycatch-related mortality observed in this species throughout 
other parts of its range (e.g., Northwest and Southwest Atlantic, 
Indian Ocean, and Central Pacific), it is likely the species 
experiences similar rates of bycatch-related mortality in this part of 
its range as well. Thus, it is likely that the historical and continued 
levels of exploitation in this part of the species' range are impacting 
the species, such that listing may be warranted.
    We found evidence that bigeye threshers are known to interact with 
longline fisheries throughout the Indo-Pacific. In the Western and 
Central Pacific, where sharks represent 25 percent of the longline 
fishery catch, observer data showed that bigeye thresher shark is the 
7th most commonly bycaught species of shark out of a total 49 species 
reported by observers (Molony, 2007). We found that bigeye threshers 
are commonly taken as bycatch in longline fisheries in the Republic of 
the Marshall Islands, in which they exhibit at-vessel and/or post-
release mortality of 50 percent, and nearly 99 percent are finned and 
subsequently discarded (Bromhead, 2012). Further, in a species status 
snapshot for thresher sharks in the Western and Central Pacific, Clarke 
et al., (2011) identified significant decreasing size trends for 
thresher sharks in tropical areas, which may be indicative of 
population declines in these areas. It is thought that these findings 
most likely reflect trends of bigeye threshers as they are the most 
common thresher species encountered in this region, with catches of 
common and pelagic threshers characterized as rare or uncommon. Bigeye 
threshers are also commonly caught by Hawaii longline fisheries, 
particularly on deep-set gear (Walsh et al., 2009), and represented 4.1 
percent of shark catches from 1995-2006. While catches of thresher 
sharks (Alopias spp.) have trended upward, actual landings of thresher 
sharks in Hawaii have decreased from 50 mt in 2001 to 16 mt in 2010, 
presumably due to the implementation of state and Federal laws 
regarding shark finning (NMFS, 2011).
    In the Indian Ocean, while fisheries are directed at other species, 
bigeye threshers are commonly caught as bycatch and catch rates are 
considered high (IOTC, 2011; Hererra and Pierre, 2011). For example, 
bycatch of bigeye threshers has been recorded in Japanese and Taiwanese 
longline fisheries. According to Japanese observer data, 162 bigeye 
threshers were bycaught in 6 months (from July 2010 to January 2011). 
These data do not include live-released bigeye thresher sharks (Ardill 
et al., 2011), which reportedly have high post-release mortality rates 
(IOTC, 2014). Observer data from Taiwanese longline fleets (with 
coverage ranging from only 2.2 percent in 2004 to 20.8 percent in 2007) 
recorded a total of 445 bigeye threshers bycaught from 2004-2008, with 
approximately 61 percent discarded (Huang and Liu, 2010). Hooking 
mortality is apparently very high in this region; therefore, the IOTC's 
regulation 10/12 that prohibits the onboard retention of any part of 
any thresher species and promotes live release of thresher sharks may 
be ineffective for the conservation of bigeye thresher sharks. For 
example, in the Portuguese longline fleet, bigeye threshers experienced 
a high rate of at-vessel mortality of 68.4 percent (n = 19) from May to 
September 2011 (Ardill et al., 2011). The IOTC reported in 2014 that 
``maintaining or increasing effort in this region will probably result 
in further declines in biomass, productivity and CPUE'' for bigeye 
threshers (IOTC, 2014).
    Overall, there is considerable uncertainty regarding the actual 
levels of bycatch of bigeye thresher shark occurring throughout its 
range; however, it is likely that these rates are significantly under-
reported due to a lack of comprehensive observer coverage in areas of 
its range in which the highest fishing pressure occurs, as well as a 
tendency for fishers to not record discards in fishery logbooks. 
Nevertheless, given the prevalence of bigeye threshers as incidental 
catch throughout its range and the species' observed high hooking and 
post-release mortality rates, combined with the species' low 
productivity, bycatch-related fishing mortality may be a threat placing 
the species at an increased risk of extinction.
    The petition identified recreational fishing as the fourth category 
of overutilization. In our files, we found evidence that thresher 
sharks, particularly common threshers, are valued by recreational sport 
fishermen throughout the species' U.S. East Coast and West Coast range; 
however, bigeye threshers do not appear to be as important in 
recreational fisheries and are largely prohibited in many fisheries 
within the United States. The petition described results from Heberer 
(2010), which identified the potential negative impact of recreational 
fishing on the survival of congener, A. vulpinus, by assessing post-
release survivorship of sharks captured using the caudal fin-based 
techniques used by most

[[Page 48067]]

recreational fishermen in southern California. As previously described, 
thresher sharks use their elongate upper caudal lobe to immobilize prey 
before it is consumed, and the majority of common thresher sharks 
captured in the southern California recreational fishery are hooked in 
the caudal fin and hauled-in backwards. This is significant because 
common threshers are obligate ram ventilators that require forward 
motion to ventilate the gills (Heberer, 2010), and the reduced ability 
to extract oxygen from the water during capture, as well as the stress 
induced from these capture methods, may influence recovery following 
release. The findings of Heberer (2010) demonstrate that large tail-
hooked common thresher sharks with prolonged fight times (>=85 min) 
exhibit a heightened stress response, which may contribute to an 
increased mortality rate. This work suggests, especially for larger 
thresher sharks, that recreational catch-and-release may not be an 
effective conservation-based strategy for the species. A recent paper 
by Sepulveda (2014) found similar evidence for high post-release 
mortality of recreationally caught common thresher sharks in the 
California recreational shark fishery. Their results demonstrated that 
caudal fin-based angling techniques, which often result in trailing 
gear left embedded in the shark, can negatively affect post-release 
survivorship. This work suggests that mouth-based angling techniques 
can, when performed properly, result in a higher survivorship of 
released sharks. The petition argues that because common thresher 
sharks may exhibit high mortality in recreational fisheries that bigeye 
threshers would likely exhibit similar results. While this may be true, 
in our files, we found no evidence to suggest that bigeye threshers are 
declining (or responding in a negative fashion) as a result of 
utilization by recreational fisheries. While it is not known if this 
species enters the California recreational fishery on any regular 
basis, presumably only few are taken. Further, there are no records 
from the recreational fishery off Oregon or Washington (NMFS, 2007), 
and in fact, fishing of all thresher species is prohibited in 
Washington. Likewise, in the Northwest Atlantic, bigeye threshers have 
been prohibited in recreational fisheries by Federal regulations since 
1999. Further, U.S. states from Maine to Florida have adopted the 
Interstate Fisheries Management Plan (FMP) for Atlantic Coastal Sharks 
adopted by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC), 
which prohibits recreational fishing of bigeye threshers. Finally, 
since prohibition of this species was implemented in 1999, there has 
been no observed recreational harvest of this species, with the 
exception of years 2002 and 2006 (NMFS, 2014). The petition did not 
provide, nor could we find in our files, any information regarding the 
threat of recreational fishing to bigeye threshers throughout the rest 
of the species' range. Thus, we find that the information presented in 
the petition, and in our files, does not comprise substantial 
information that would lead us to conclude the species may have an 
increased risk of extinction from overutilization as a result of 
recreational fishing activities.
    Overall, trends in the North West and Central Atlantic Ocean 
suggest that the species experienced historical declines from 
overexploitation, but may be stabilized and possibly increasing in 
recent years, although there is considerable uncertainty regarding 
these trends. Elsewhere across the species' range, information in the 
petition and in our files suggests that the species may continue to 
experience declines as a result of overutilization from both direct and 
indirect fishing pressure. In summary, the petition, references cited, 
and information in our files comprise substantial information 
indicating that listing may be warranted because of overutilization for 
commercial purposes.

Inadequacy of Existing Regulatory Mechanisms

    The petition points to ``virtually non-existent international 
regulatory protections'' to assert that bigeye threshers qualify for 
listing due to the inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms. For 
example, the petition mentions the lack of protections from the 
Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES) for the 
bigeye thresher shark, but then states that even if the species was 
listed under CITES, it would still be inadequate due to the fact that a 
CITES listing would only address threats associated with the 
international trade of the species, and would not address such impacts 
as bycatch. Although a CITES Appendix II listing or international 
reporting requirements would provide better data on the global catch 
and trade of the bigeye thresher shark, the lack of a CITES listing or 
requirements does not suggest that current regulatory mechanisms are 
inadequate to protect the bigeye thresher shark population from 
becoming threatened or endangered under the ESA. The petition also 
asserts that the recent listing of bigeye thresher shark under Appendix 
II of the Convention of Migratory Species (CMS) is also inadequate 
given that the United States and other range states are not Member 
Parties to CMS and are therefore not bound by the requirements imposed 
by the Appendix II listing. The petition further states that the 
Convention text is only suggestive and not self-executing upon the 
listing of a species. On the contrary, we find that a CMS Appendix II 
listing now encourages international cooperation towards conservation 
of the species, and although the United States is not currently a party 
to CMS, the United States is a signatory to a number of CMS instruments 
for the conservation of various marine species, including sharks.
    The petition also asserts that finning regulations and species-
specific retention bans are ``inadequate'' for protecting the bigeye 
thresher shark species because they may still be caught, either 
directly or indirectly. The petition also cites several regional 
fisheries management organizations (RFMOs) that implement a 5 percent 
fin-to-carcass ratio regulation, describes what the petitioner contends 
are potential loopholes in those regulations, and states that these 
general regulations are inadequate for the bigeye thresher shark, whose 
larger fins make it a more targeted species. The petition further 
contends that species-specific retention bans for bigeye threshers, 
such as the ones implemented by ICCAT and IOTC that specifically 
prohibit the retention, transshipping, landing, storing, selling, or 
offering for sale any part or whole carcass of bigeye thresher sharks, 
are also inadequate largely because they do not address incidental 
catch and subsequent high mortality rates of the species. Based on the 
information presented in the petition and in our files, we find that 
the bigeye thresher shark is highly valued for its fins, and can be 
identified in the shark fin market at the species level. While 
regulations banning the finning of sharks are a common form of shark 
management and have been adopted by far more countries and regional 
fishery management organizations than the petition lists (see HSI, 
2012), we agree with the petition that due to high rates of hooking 
mortality observed in this species as a result of incidental catch, 
prohibitions on the retention of bigeye thresher or restrictions on the 
finning of sharks may not be adequate to protect the bigeye thresher 
from fishing mortality rates that may contribute to its extinction 
risk, especially given the species' significantly low productivity and 
intrinsic rate of population increase.

[[Page 48068]]

    In addition to the inadequacy of international regulations, the 
petition states that ``while the U.S. has attempted to protect the 
bigeye thresher shark in U.S. waters, piecemeal protections that fail 
to cover the species throughout its migratory range have proven to be 
unsuccessful.'' Though U.S. regulations by their jurisdictional nature 
only cover U.S. fishers, we do not agree that this makes them 
inadequate. We find that U.S. national fishing regulations include 
numerous regulatory mechanisms for both sharks in general, and bigeye 
threshers specifically, that may help protect the species. For example, 
in the U.S. Atlantic, the bigeye thresher has been a prohibited species 
in both commercial and recreational fisheries since 2000 and 1999, 
respectively, under the 1999 Fishery Management Plan for Atlantic 
Tunas, Swordfish, and Sharks. In addition, current management measures 
for the Atlantic shark fisheries include the following: commercial 
quotas, commercial retention limits, limited entry, time-area closures, 
and recreational bag limits. Sharks are required to be landed with fins 
naturally attached to the carcass. Additionally, several U.S. states 
have prohibited the sale or trade of shark fins/products as well, 
including Hawaii, Oregon, Washington, California, Illinois, Maryland, 
Delaware, New York, and Massachusetts, subsequently decreasing the 
United States' contribution to the fin trade. For example, after the 
state of Hawaii prohibited finning in its waters in 2000 and required 
shark fins to be landed with their corresponding carcasses in the 
state, shark fin imports from the United States into Hong Kong declined 
significantly (54 percent decrease, from 374 to 171 tonnes), as Hawaii 
could no longer be used as a fin trading center for the international 
fisheries operating and finning in the Central Pacific (Miller, 2014). 
Except for smooth dogfish (Mustelus canis), the U.S. Shark Conservation 
Act of 2010 protects all shark species, making it illegal to remove any 
of the fins of a shark (including the tail) at sea; to have custody, 
control, or possession of any such fin aboard a fishing vessel unless 
it is naturally attached to the corresponding carcass; to transfer any 
such fin from one vessel to another vessel at sea, or to receive any 
such fin in such transfer, without the fin naturally attached to the 
corresponding carcass; or to land any such fin that is not naturally 
attached to the corresponding carcass, or to land any shark carcass 
without such fins naturally attached. However, we do agree with the 
petition that these regulations do not address the issue of bycatch-
related mortality of the species, especially considering the fact that 
bigeye threshers are still bycaught in U.S. fisheries.
    Overall, while measures may be implemented to reduce bycatch, we 
found no evidence that these measures have been incorporated into 
common practice throughout the species' range, particularly in areas 
where fishing pressure is most concentrated. Further, while numerous 
finning and species-specific retention bans have been implemented, 
these regulations fail to address the species' high rate of bycatch-
related mortality. In summary, the petition, references cited, and 
information in our files comprise substantial information indicating 
that the species may be impacted by the inadequacy of regulatory 
mechanisms in parts of its range, such that listing may be warranted.

Other Natural or Manmade Factors Affecting Its Existence

    The petition states that the biological constraints of the bigeye 
thresher shark, such as its low reproduction rate (typically 2-4 pups a 
year), coupled with a late age of maturity (approximately 12-14 years 
for females, and slightly earlier for males, between 9-10 years) 
contribute to the species' vulnerability to harvesting and its 
inability to recover rapidly. We agree with the petition that the 
bigeye thresher shark exhibits relatively slow growth rates and low 
fecundity. An ecological risk assessment conducted to inform the 
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) 
categorized the relative risk of overexploitation of the 11 major 
species of pelagic sharks, including the bigeye thresher shark 
(Cort[eacute]s et al., 2010, 2012). The study derived an overall 
vulnerability ranking for each of the 11 species, which was defined as 
``a measure of the extent to which the impact of a fishery [Atlantic 
longline] on a species will exceed its biological ability to renew 
itself'' (Cort[eacute]s et al., 2010, 2012). This robust assessment 
found that bigeye thresher sharks have a combination of low 
productivity and high susceptibility to pelagic longline gear, which 
places the bigeye thresher at high risk of overexploitation to the 
combined pelagic longline fisheries in the Atlantic Ocean 
(Cort[eacute]s et al., 2010, 2012). In fact, of the 11 species examined 
in this study, Atlantic bigeye thresher sharks were identified as one 
of the most vulnerable and least productive shark species. Even within 
the genus Alopias, the bigeye thresher shark has the slowest population 
growth rate of all thresher sharks, with an exceptionally low potential 
annual rate of population increase (0.002-0.009 or 1.6 percent) under 
sustainable exploitation (Cort[eacute]s, 2008; Dulvy et al., 2008; 
Smith et al., 2008). This makes them particularly vulnerable to any 
level of fisheries exploitation, whether targeted or caught as bycatch 
in fisheries for other species. Given that bigeye thresher sharks are 
caught regularly as incidental bycatch throughout its range and 
experience high mortality rates as a result, and that the species may 
be targeted in some areas for its fins, the species' growth and 
reproductive factors may inhibit the species' ability to recover from 
even moderate levels of exploitation, thus placing the bigeye thresher 
shark at an increased risk of extinction as a result. In summary, the 
petition, references cited, and information in our files comprise 
substantial information indicating that the species is impacted by 
``other natural or manmade factors,'' including the life history trait 
of slow productivity, such that listing the species may be warranted.

Summary of Section 4(a)(1) Factors

    We conclude that the petition does not present substantial 
scientific or commercial information indicating that the ESA section 
(4)(a)(1) threats of ``present or threatened destruction, modification, 
or curtailment of its habitat or range'' or ``disease or predation'' 
may be causing or contributing to an increased risk of extinction for 
the global population of the bigeye thresher shark. However, we do 
conclude that the petition and information in our files present 
substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that the 
section 4(a)(1) factor ``overutilization for commercial, recreational, 
scientific, or educational purposes,'' as well as ``inadequacy of 
existing regulatory mechanisms'' and ``other manmade or natural 
factors,'' may be causing or contributing to an increased risk of 
extinction for the species.

Petition Finding

    Based on the above information and the criteria specified in 50 CFR 
424.14(b)(2), we find that the petition and information readily 
available in our files present substantial scientific and commercial 
information indicating that the petitioned action of listing the bigeye 
thresher shark worldwide as threatened or endangered may be warranted. 
Therefore, in accordance with section 4(b)(3)(A) of the ESA and NMFS' 
implementing regulations (50

[[Page 48069]]

CFR 424.14(b)(3)), we will commence a status review of the species. 
During the status review, we will determine whether the species is in 
danger of extinction (endangered) or likely to become so within the 
foreseeable future (threatened) throughout all or a significant portion 
of its range. We now initiate this review, and thus, we consider the 
bigeye thresher shark to be a candidate species (69 FR 19975; April 15, 
2004). Within 12 months of the receipt of the petition (April 27, 
2016), we will make a finding as to whether listing the species as 
endangered or threatened is warranted as required by section 4(b)(3)(B) 
of the ESA. If listing the species is found to be warranted, we will 
publish a proposed rule and solicit public comments before developing 
and publishing a final rule.

Information Solicited

    To ensure that the status review is based on the best available 
scientific and commercial data, we are soliciting information relevant 
to whether the bigeye thresher shark is endangered or threatened. 
Specifically, we are soliciting information in the following areas: (1) 
Historical and current distribution and abundance of this species 
throughout its range; (2) historical and current population trends; (3) 
life history in marine environments, including identified nursery 
grounds; (4) historical and current data on bigeye thresher shark 
bycatch and retention in industrial, commercial, artisanal, and 
recreational fisheries worldwide; (5) historical and current data on 
bigeye thresher shark discards in global fisheries; (6) data on the 
trade of bigeye thresher shark products, including fins, jaws, meat, 
and teeth; (7) any current or planned activities that may adversely 
impact the species; (8) ongoing or planned efforts to protect and 
restore the species and its habitats; (9) population structure 
information, such as genetics data; and (10) management, regulatory, 
and enforcement information. We request that all information be 
accompanied by: (1) Supporting documentation such as maps, 
bibliographic references, or reprints of pertinent publications; and 
(2) the submitter's name, address, and any association, institution, or 
business that the person represents.

References Cited

    A complete list of references is available upon request to the 
Office of Protected Resources (see ADDRESSES).

Authority

    The authority for this action is the Endangered Species Act of 
1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).

    Dated: August 5, 2015.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2015-19551 Filed 8-10-15; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 3510-22-P



                                                                        Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 154 / Tuesday, August 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                           48061

                                                   Dated: August 5, 2015.                                West Highway, Silver Spring, MD                       scientific or commercial information
                                                 Samuel D. Rauch III,                                    20910.                                                indicating that the petitioned action
                                                 Deputy Assistant Administrator for                        Instructions: You must submit                       may be warranted, and promptly
                                                 Regulatory Programs, National Marine                    comments by one of the above methods                  publish the finding in the Federal
                                                 Fisheries Service.                                      to ensure that we receive, document,                  Register (16 U.S.C. 1533(b)(3)(A)). When
                                                 [FR Doc. 2015–19550 Filed 8–10–15; 8:45 am]             and consider them. Comments sent by                   we find that substantial scientific or
                                                 BILLING CODE 3510–22–P                                  any other method, to any other address                commercial information in a petition
                                                                                                         or individual, or received after the end              and in our files indicates the petitioned
                                                                                                         of the comment period, may not be                     action may be warranted (a ‘‘positive 90-
                                                 DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE                                  considered. All comments received are                 day finding’’), we are required to
                                                                                                         a part of the public record and will                  promptly commence a review of the
                                                 National Oceanic and Atmospheric                        generally be posted for public viewing                status of the species concerned, which
                                                 Administration                                          on http://www.regulations.gov without                 includes conducting a comprehensive
                                                                                                         change. All personal identifying                      review of the best available scientific
                                                 50 CFR Parts 223 and 224                                information (e.g., name, address, etc.),              and commercial information. Within 12
                                                 [Docket No. 150506426–5426–01]                          confidential business information, or                 months of receiving the petition, we
                                                                                                         otherwise sensitive information                       must conclude the review with a finding
                                                 RIN 0648–XD942                                          submitted voluntarily by the sender will              as to whether, in fact, the petitioned
                                                                                                         be publicly accessible. We will accept                action is warranted. Because the finding
                                                 Endangered and Threatened Wildlife;                                                                           at the 12-month stage is based on a
                                                 90-day Finding on a Petition To List the                anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/A’’ in
                                                                                                         the required fields if you wish to remain             significantly more thorough review of
                                                 Bigeye Thresher Shark as Threatened                                                                           the available information, a ‘‘may be
                                                 or Endangered Under the Endangered                      anonymous). Attachments to electronic
                                                                                                         comments will be accepted in Microsoft                warranted’’ finding at the 90-day stage
                                                 Species Act                                                                                                   does not prejudge the outcome of the
                                                                                                         Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF file formats
                                                 AGENCY:  National Marine Fisheries                      only                                                  status review.
                                                 Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and                                                                             Under the ESA, a listing
                                                                                                         FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                 Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),                                                                            determination may address a ‘‘species,’’
                                                                                                         Chelsey Young, NMFS, Office of
                                                 Commerce.                                                                                                     which is defined to also include
                                                                                                         Protected Resources (301) 427–8491.                   subspecies and, for any vertebrate
                                                 ACTION: 90-day petition finding, request                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                            species, any DPS that interbreeds when
                                                 for information, and initiation of status
                                                                                                         Background                                            mature (16 U.S.C. 1532(16)). A joint
                                                 review.                                                                                                       NMFS–U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
                                                                                                            On April 27, 2015, we received a                   (USFWS) policy clarifies the agencies’
                                                 SUMMARY:    We, NMFS, announce the 90-                  petition from Defenders of Wildlife
                                                 day finding on a petition to list the                                                                         interpretation of the phrase ‘‘distinct
                                                                                                         requesting that we list the bigeye                    population segment’’ for the purposes of
                                                 bigeye thresher shark (Alopias                          thresher shark (Alopias superciliosus) as
                                                 superciliosus) range-wide, or in the                                                                          listing, delisting, and reclassifying a
                                                                                                         endangered or threatened under the                    species under the ESA (‘‘DPS Policy’’;
                                                 alternative, as one or more distinct                    ESA, or, in the alternative, to list one or
                                                 population segments (DPSs) identified                                                                         61 FR 4722; February 7, 1996). A
                                                                                                         more distinct population segments                     species, subspecies, or DPS is
                                                 by the petitioners as endangered or                     (DPSs), should we find they exist, as
                                                 threatened under the U.S. Endangered                                                                          ‘‘endangered’’ if it is in danger of
                                                                                                         threatened or endangered under the                    extinction throughout all or a significant
                                                 Species Act (ESA). We find that the                     ESA. Defenders of Wildlife also
                                                 petition presents substantial scientific                                                                      portion of its range, and ‘‘threatened’’ if
                                                                                                         requested that critical habitat be                    it is likely to become endangered within
                                                 or commercial information indicating                    designated for this species in U.S.
                                                 that the petitioned action may be                                                                             the foreseeable future throughout all or
                                                                                                         waters concurrent with final ESA                      a significant portion of its range (ESA
                                                 warranted for the species worldwide.                    listing. The petition states that the
                                                 Accordingly, we will initiate a status                                                                        sections 3(6) and 3(20), respectively; 16
                                                                                                         bigeye thresher shark merits listing as               U.S.C. 1532(6) and (20)). Pursuant to the
                                                 review of bigeye thresher shark range-                  an endangered or threatened species
                                                 wide at this time. To ensure that the                                                                         ESA and our implementing regulations,
                                                                                                         under the ESA because of the following:               the determination of whether a species
                                                 status review is comprehensive, we are                  (1) The species faces threats from
                                                 soliciting scientific and commercial                                                                          is threatened or endangered shall be
                                                                                                         historical and continued fishing for both             based on any one or a combination of
                                                 information regarding this species.                     commercial and recreational purposes;                 the following five section 4(a)(1) factors:
                                                 DATES: Information and comments on                      (2) life history characteristics and                  The present or threatened destruction,
                                                 the subject action must be received by                  limited ability to recover from fishing               modification, or curtailment of habitat
                                                 October 13, 2015.                                       pressure make the species particularly                or range; overutilization for commercial,
                                                 ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,                     vulnerable to overexploitation; and (3)               recreational, scientific, or educational
                                                 information, or data, identified by                     regulations are inadequate to protect the             purposes; disease or predation;
                                                 ‘‘NOAA–NMFS–2015–0089’’ by any one                      bigeye thresher shark.                                inadequacy of existing regulatory
                                                 of the following methods:                                                                                     mechanisms; and any other natural or
                                                    • Electronic Submissions: Submit all                 ESA Statutory Provisions and Policy
                                                                                                                                                               manmade factors affecting the species’
                                                 electronic public comments via the                      Considerations
                                                                                                                                                               existence (16 U.S.C. 1533(a)(1), 50 CFR
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                                                 Federal eRulemaking Portal. Go to                         Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the ESA of 1973,              424.11(c)).
                                                 www.regulations.gov/                                    as amended (U.S.C. 1531 et seq.),                        ESA-implementing regulations issued
                                                 #!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2015-                        requires, to the maximum extent                       jointly by NMFS and USFWS (50 CFR
                                                 0089. Click the ‘‘Comment Now’’ icon,                   practicable, that within 90 days of                   424.14(b)) define ‘‘substantial
                                                 complete the required fields, and enter                 receipt of a petition to list a species as            information’’ in the context of reviewing
                                                 or attach your comments.                                threatened or endangered, the Secretary               a petition to list, delist, or reclassify a
                                                    • Mail or hand-delivery: Office of                   of Commerce make a finding on whether                 species as the amount of information
                                                 Protected Resources, NMFS, 1315 East-                   that petition presents substantial                    that would lead a reasonable person to


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                                                 48062                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 154 / Tuesday, August 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 believe that the measure proposed in the                available in our files, indicates that the            www.natureserve.org/prodServices/pdf/
                                                 petition may be warranted. When                         petitioned entity constitutes a ‘‘species’’           NatureServeStatusAssessmentsListing-
                                                 evaluating whether substantial                          eligible for listing under the ESA. Next,             Dec%202008.pdf). Thus, when a
                                                 information is contained in a petition,                 we evaluate whether the information                   petition cites such classifications, we
                                                 we must consider whether the petition:                  indicates that the species at issue faces             will evaluate the source of information
                                                 (1) Clearly indicates the administrative                extinction risk that is cause for concern;            that the classification is based upon in
                                                 measure recommended and gives the                       this may be indicated in information                  light of the standards on extinction risk
                                                 scientific and any common name of the                   expressly discussing the species’ status              and impacts or threats discussed above.
                                                 species involved; (2) contains detailed                 and trends, or in information describing
                                                 narrative justification for the                         impacts and threats to the species. We                Species Description
                                                 recommended measure, describing,                        evaluate any information on specific                  Distribution
                                                 based on available information, past and                demographic factors pertinent to
                                                                                                                                                                  The bigeye thresher shark (Alopias
                                                 present numbers and distribution of the                 evaluating extinction risk for the species
                                                                                                                                                               superciliosus) is a large, highly
                                                 species involved and any threats faced                  at issue (e.g., population abundance and
                                                                                                                                                               migratory oceanic and coastal species of
                                                 by the species; (3) provides information                trends, productivity, spatial structure,
                                                                                                                                                               shark found throughout the world in
                                                 regarding the status of the species over                age structure, sex ratio, diversity,
                                                                                                                                                               tropical and temperate seas. In the
                                                 all or a significant portion of its range;              current and historical range, habitat
                                                                                                                                                               Western Atlantic (including the Gulf of
                                                 and (4) is accompanied by the                           integrity or fragmentation), and the
                                                                                                                                                               Mexico), bigeye threshers can be found
                                                 appropriate supporting documentation                    potential contribution of identified
                                                                                                                                                               off the Atlantic coast of the United
                                                 in the form of bibliographic references,                demographic risks to extinction risk for
                                                                                                                                                               States (from New York to Florida), and
                                                 reprints of pertinent publications,                     the species. We then evaluate the
                                                 copies of reports or letters from                       potential links between these                         in the Gulf of Mexico off Florida,
                                                 authorities, and maps (50 CFR                           demographic risks and the causative                   Mississippi and Texas. They can also be
                                                 424.14(b)(2)).                                          impacts and threats identified in ESA                 found in Mexico (from Veracruz to
                                                    At the 90-day stage, we evaluate the                 section 4(a)(1).                                      Yucatan), Bahamas, Cuba, Venezuela, as
                                                 petitioner’s request based upon the                        Information presented on impacts or                well as central and southern Brazil. In
                                                 information in the petition, including its              threats should be specific to the species             the Eastern Atlantic, bigeye threshers
                                                 references, and the information readily                 and should reasonably suggest that one                are found from Portugal to the Western
                                                 available in our files. We do not conduct               or more of these factors may be                       Cape of South Africa, including the
                                                 additional research, and we do not                      operative threats that act or have acted              western and central Mediterranean Sea.
                                                 solicit information from parties outside                on the species to the point that it may               In the Indian Ocean, bigeye threshers
                                                 the agency to help us in evaluating the                 warrant protection under the ESA.                     are found in South Africa (Eastern Cape
                                                 petition. We will accept the petitioner’s               Broad statements about generalized                    and KwaZulu-Natal), Madagascar,
                                                 sources and characterizations of the                    threats to the species, or identification             Arabian Sea (Somalia), Gulf of Aden,
                                                 information presented, if they appear to                of factors that could negatively impact               Maldives, and Sri Lanka. In the Pacific
                                                 be based on accepted scientific                         a species, do not constitute substantial              Ocean, from West to East, bigeye
                                                 principles, unless we have specific                     information that listing may be                       threshers are known from southern
                                                 information in our files that indicates                 warranted. We look for information                    Japan (including Okinawa), Taiwan
                                                 the petition’s information is incorrect,                indicating that not only is the particular            (Province of China), Vietnam, between
                                                 unreliable, obsolete, or otherwise                      species exposed to a factor, but that the             the Northern Mariana Islands and Wake
                                                 irrelevant to the requested action.                     species may be responding in a negative               Island, down to the northwestern coast
                                                 Information that is susceptible to more                 fashion; then we assess the potential                 of Australia and New Zealand. Moving
                                                 than one interpretation or that is                      significance of that negative response.               to the Central Pacific, bigeye threshers
                                                 contradicted by other available                            Many petitions identify risk                       are known from the area between Wake,
                                                 information will not be dismissed at the                classifications made by non-                          Marshall, Howland and Baker, Palmyra,
                                                 90-day finding stage, so long as it is                  governmental organizations, such as the               Johnston, Hawaiian Islands, Line
                                                 reliable and a reasonable person would                  International Union for the                           Islands, and between Marquesas and
                                                 conclude that it supports the                           Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the                    Galapagos Islands. Finally, in the
                                                 petitioner’s assertions. Conclusive                     American Fisheries Society, or                        Eastern Pacific, bigeye threshers occur
                                                 information indicating the species may                  NatureServe, as evidence of extinction                from Canada to Mexico (Gulf of
                                                 meet the ESA’s requirements for listing                 risk for a species. Risk classifications by           California) and west of Galapagos
                                                 is not required to make a positive 90-                  other organizations or made under other               Islands (Ecuador). They are also
                                                 day finding. We will not conclude that                  Federal or state statutes may be                      possibly found off Peru and northern
                                                 a lack of specific information alone                    informative, but such classification                  Chile (Compagno, 2001).
                                                 negates a positive 90-day finding, if a                 alone may not provide the rationale for
                                                                                                                                                               Physical Characteristics
                                                 reasonable person would conclude that                   a positive 90-day finding under the
                                                 the unknown information itself suggests                 ESA. For example, as explained by                        The bigeye thresher shark possesses
                                                 an extinction risk of concern for the                   NatureServe, their assessments of a                   an elongated upper caudal lobe almost
                                                 species at issue.                                       species’ conservation status do ‘‘not                 equal to its body length, which is
                                                    To make a 90-day finding on a                        constitute a recommendation by                        unique to the Alopiidae family. It has a
                                                 petition to list a species, we evaluate                 NatureServe for listing under the U.S.                broad head, a moderately long and
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                                                 whether the petition presents                           Endangered Species Act’’ because                      bulbous snout, curved yet broad-tipped
                                                 substantial scientific or commercial                    NatureServe assessments ‘‘have                        pectoral fins, distinctive grooves on the
                                                 information indicating the subject                      different criteria, evidence                          head above the gills, and large teeth.
                                                 species may be either threatened or                     requirements, purposes and taxonomic                  The first dorsal fin mid base is closer to
                                                 endangered, as defined by the ESA.                      coverage than government lists of                     the pelvic-fin bases than to the pectoral-
                                                 First, we evaluate whether the                          endangered and threatened species, and                fin bases. The caudal tip is broad with
                                                 information presented in the petition,                  therefore these two types of lists should             a wide terminal lobe. While some of the
                                                 along with the information readily                      not be expected to coincide’’ (http://                above characteristics may be shared by


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                                                                        Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 154 / Tuesday, August 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                           48063

                                                 other thresher shark species, diagnostic                per litter (Chen et al., 1997; Compagno,              decline of bigeye thresher sharks has
                                                 features separating this species from the               2001; Moreno and Morón, 1992) and a                  been caused mainly by commercial and
                                                 other two thresher shark species                        long gestation period of 12 months,                   recreational fishing (both direct harvest
                                                 (common thresher, A. vulpinus, and                      although this remains uncertain due to                and bycatch), as evidenced by
                                                 pelagic thresher, A. pelagicus) are their               a lack of birthing seasonality data (Liu              substantial population declines in every
                                                 extremely large eyes, which extend onto                 et al., 1998). They (like all thresher                area where sufficient historical and
                                                 the dorsal surface of the head, and the                 sharks) are ovoviviparous and                         current population data exist. In the
                                                 prominent notches that run dorso-lateral                oophagous (developing embryo in uteri                 Northwest and Western Central
                                                 from behind the eyes to behind the gills.               eat unfertilized eggs produced by the                 Atlantic, the petition cites an 80 percent
                                                 The body can be purplish grey or grey-                  ovary). Size at birth for the bigeye                  decline in bigeye thresher sharks since
                                                 brown on the upper surface and sides,                   thresher ranges from 64–106 cm TL                     the early 2000s, with an estimated
                                                 with grey to white coloring on its                      (Gilmore, 1993), but a mating season has              average overall decline of 63 percent
                                                 underside (light color of abdomen does                  not yet been identified. Bigeye threshers             since the beginning of data collection in
                                                 not extend over pectoral fin bases like                 have the slowest population growth rate               1986. In the Southwest Atlantic, the
                                                 common thresher) and no white dot on                    of all thresher sharks, with an                       petition describes the popularity of
                                                 upper pectoral fin tips like those often                exceptionally low potential annual rate               bigeye threshers in the Brazilian Santos
                                                 seen in common threshers (Compagno                      of population increase (0.02; IUCN;                   longline fishery, and asserts that some
                                                 2001).                                                  l=1.009 yr¥1, Cortés, 2009).                         vessels are directly targeting this species
                                                 Habitat                                                 Analysis of Petition and Information                  specifically for its fins. The petition also
                                                                                                         Readily Available in NMFS Files                       describes consistent gradual decreases
                                                   Bigeye thresher sharks are found in a                                                                       in catch per unit effort (CPUE) for this
                                                 diverse spectrum of locations, including                   Below we evaluate the information                  species in the region. The petition
                                                 coastal waters over continental shelves,                provided in the petition and readily                  describes likely declines of bigeye
                                                 on the high seas in the epipelagic zone                 available in our files to determine if the            thresher sharks in the Mediterranean
                                                 far from land, in deep waters near the                  petition presents substantial scientific              based on declines of other pelagic shark
                                                 bottom on continental slopes, and                       or commercial information indicating                  species, including congener A. vulpinus,
                                                 sometimes in shallow inshore waters.                    that an endangered or threatened listing              due to high fishing pressure. In the
                                                 They are an epipelagic, neritic, and                    may be warranted as a result of any of                Indo-West Pacific, the petition cites the
                                                 epibenthic shark, ranging from the                      the factors listed under section 4(a)(1) of           prevalence of finning activities,
                                                 surface and in the intertidal to at least               the ESA. If requested to list a global
                                                                                                                                                               including both legal and extensive
                                                 500 m deep, but mostly below 100 m                      population or, alternatively, a DPS, we
                                                                                                                                                               illegal directed shark catch in this
                                                 depth. In our files, we found                           first determine if the petition presents
                                                                                                                                                               region, and states that the bigeye
                                                 information indicating that bigeye                      substantial information that the
                                                                                                                                                               thresher in particular is preferentially
                                                 threshers prefer an optimum swimming                    petitioned action is warranted for the
                                                                                                                                                               retained in certain fisheries. In the
                                                 depth of 240–360 m, water temperature                   global population. If it does, then we
                                                                                                                                                               Eastern Central Pacific, the petition cites
                                                 of 10–16 °C, salinity of 34.5–34.7 ppt,                 make a positive finding on the petition
                                                                                                                                                               83 percent declines in thresher
                                                 and dissolved oxygen range between                      and conduct a review of the species
                                                                                                                                                               populations when compared to research
                                                 3.0–4.0 ml/l (Cao et al., 2011).                        range-wide. If after this review we find
                                                                                                                                                               surveys from the 1950s. Finally, the
                                                                                                         that the species does not warrant listing
                                                 Feeding Ecology                                         range-wide, then we will consider                     petition points to increased interest in
                                                    Bigeye threshers feed on small to                    whether the populations requested by                  recreational fishing of the bigeye
                                                 medium sized pelagic fishes (e.g.,                      the petition qualify as DPSs and warrant              thresher shark, with the potential for
                                                 lancetfishes, herring, mackerel and                     listing. If the petition does not present             high post-release mortality. The petition
                                                 small billfishes), bottom fishes (e.g.,                 substantial information that the global               does not provide information on
                                                 hake), and cephalopods (e.g., squids).                  population may warrant listing, but it                abundance estimates across the global
                                                 Thresher sharks are unique in that they                 has requested that we list any distinct               range of the species.
                                                 use their tail in a whip-like fashion to                populations of the species as threatened                 The last IUCN assessment of the
                                                 disorient and incapacitate their prey                   or endangered, then we consider                       bigeye thresher shark was completed in
                                                 prior to consumption (Oliver, 2013).                    whether the petition provides                         2009, and several estimates of global
                                                 The arrangement of the eyes, with                       substantial information that the                      and subpopulation trends and status
                                                 keyhole-shaped orbits extending onto                    requested population(s) may qualify as                have been made and are described in
                                                 the dorsal surface of the head, suggest                 DPSs under the discreteness and                       the following text. In the Northwest
                                                 that this species has a dorsal/vertical                 significance criteria of our joint DPS                Atlantic, declines in relative abundance
                                                 binocular field of vision (unlike other                 Policy, and if listing any of those DPSs              cited by the petitioner were derived
                                                 threshers), which may be related to                     may be warranted. We summarize our                    from analyses of logbook data, reported
                                                 fixating on prey and striking them with                 analysis and conclusions regarding the                in Baum et al., (2003) and Cortés (2007).
                                                 its tail from below (FAO 2015 species                   information presented by the petitioners              The former study analyzed logbook data
                                                 fact sheet).                                            and in our files on the specific ESA                  for the U.S. pelagic longline fleets
                                                                                                         section 4(a)(1) factors that we find may              targeting swordfish and tunas in the
                                                 Life History                                                                                                  Northwest Atlantic, and reported an 80
                                                                                                         be affecting the species’ risk of global
                                                   Bigeye thresher sharks have an                        extinction below.                                     percent decline in relative abundance
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                                                 estimated lifespan of approximately 20–                                                                       for thresher sharks (common and bigeye
                                                 21 years and a maximum total length of                  Bigeye Thresher Shark Status and                      threshers combined) from 1986 to 2000.
                                                 about 4.6 m. Maturity in bigeye                         Trends                                                The latter study reported a 63 percent
                                                 threshers occurs at 7–13 years and 275–                    The petition does not provide a                    decline of thresher sharks (at the genus
                                                 300 cm total length (TL) for males and                  population abundance estimate for                     level) based on logbook data, occurring
                                                 8–15 years and 290–341cm (TL) for                       bigeye thresher sharks, but points to its             between 1986 and 2006 (Cortés, 2007).
                                                 females. Bigeye threshers have low                      ‘‘vulnerable’’ status on the IUCN Red                 However, the observer index data from
                                                 reproductive capacity of only 2–4 pups                  List. The petition asserts that a global              the same study (Cortés, 2007) shows an


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                                                 48064                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 154 / Tuesday, August 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 opposite trend in relative abundance,                   thresher sharks have declined between                 ESA Section 4(a)(1) Factors
                                                 with a 28 percent increase of threshers                 96 and 99 percent in abundance and                       The petition indicated three main
                                                 in the Northwest Atlantic since 1992.                   biomass in the Mediterranean Sea                      categories of threats to the bigeye
                                                 Logbook data over the same period                       (Ferretti et al., 2008). Overall, the bigeye          thresher shark: overutilization for
                                                 (1992–2006) shows a 50 percent decline                  thresher shark has been poorly                        commercial, recreational, scientific, or
                                                 in thresher sharks. The logbook dataset                 documented in the Mediterranean and                   educational purposes; the inadequacy of
                                                 is the largest available for the western                is considered scarce or rare.                         existing regulatory mechanisms; and
                                                 North Atlantic Ocean, but the observer                     In the Eastern Central Pacific, logbook            other natural or manmade factors
                                                 dataset is generally more reliable in                   data show a historical decline of                     affecting its continued existence. We
                                                 terms of consistent identification and                  thresher sharks due to pelagic fishing                discuss each of these below based on
                                                 reporting. According to observer data,                  fleet operations. Trends in abundance                 information in the petition, and the
                                                 relative abundance of thresher sharks                   and biomass of thresher sharks in the                 information readily available in our
                                                 (again, only at the genus level) in the                 eastern tropical Pacific Ocean were                   files.
                                                 western North Atlantic Ocean appears                    estimated by comparison of pelagic
                                                 to have stabilized or even be increasing                longline research surveys in the 1950s                Overutilization for Commercial,
                                                 since the late 1990s (Cortés, 2007). A                 with recent data (1990s); these data                  Recreational, Scientific, or Educational
                                                 more recent analysis using logbook data                 were collected by observers on pelagic                Purposes
                                                 between 1996 and 2005 provides some                     longline fishing vessels and                             The petition states that ‘‘the bigeye
                                                 supporting evidence that the abundance                  standardized to account for differences               thresher has shown substantial
                                                 of thresher sharks has potentially                      in depth and soak time. This analysis                 population declines in every area where
                                                 stabilized over this time period (Baum                  estimated a decline in combined                       sufficient historical and current
                                                 and Blanchard, 2010). However, it                       thresher abundance of 83 percent and a                population data exists’’ and lists four
                                                 should be noted that fishing pressure on                decline in biomass to approximately 5                 categories of overutilization: historical,
                                                 thresher sharks began over two decades                  percent of virgin levels (Ward and                    directed, incidental, and recreational.
                                                 prior to the start of this time series; thus,           Myers, 2005).                                         The petition describes historical
                                                 the estimated declines are not from                        In other areas of the world, estimates             exploitation as the first category of
                                                 virgin biomass. Furthermore, the sample                 of thresher shark abundance are limited.              overutilization for the species,
                                                 size in the latter observer analysis was                Bigeye threshers are recorded in the                  predominantly in the Northwest and
                                                 also very small compared to the                         catches of fisheries operating in the                 Central Atlantic and Eastern Central
                                                 previous logbook analyses, which both                   Indo-West Pacific, but catches of the                 Pacific. In the Northwest and Central
                                                 showed declines. Thus, abundance                        species are likely very under-reported.               Atlantic, bigeye threshers were
                                                 trend estimates derived from                            An analysis of purse seine and longline               historically caught in pelagic longline
                                                 standardized catch rate indices of the                  observer data from the Western and                    fisheries. Bigeye threshers have been a
                                                 U.S. pelagic longline fishery suggest that              Central Pacific produced no clear catch               prohibited species in all commercial
                                                 thresher sharks (both bigeye and                        trends for thresher sharks (Alopias                   fisheries in the U.S. Atlantic since 2000.
                                                 common) have likely undergone a                         spp.); however, shark data from observer              Since these regulations became effective
                                                 decline in abundance in this region.                    data sets are constrained by a lack of                in 2000, relative abundance of thresher
                                                 However, the conflicting evidence                       observer coverage, particularly for the               sharks (again, only at the genus level) in
                                                 between logbook and observer data                       North Pacific, and for the purse seine                the western North Atlantic Ocean
                                                 showing opposite trends in thresher                     fishery by the physical practicalities of             appears to have stabilized or even be
                                                 shark abundance cannot be fully                         onboard sampling (Clarke, 2011).                      increasing since the late 1990s (Baum
                                                 resolved at this time. Data are not                     Additionally, this study detected a                   and Blanchard, 2010; Cortés, 2007).
                                                 available in the petition or in our own                 significant decrease in median size for               However, it should be noted that bigeye
                                                 files to assess the trend in population                 thresher sharks in tropical areas, most               threshers are still caught as bycatch and
                                                 abundance in this region since 2006, or                 likely reflective of trends in bigeye                 occasionally landed in the Northwest
                                                 to assess the trend specific to the bigeye              threshers as they are the most                        Atlantic Ocean despite its prohibited
                                                 thresher shark. Because the logbook data                commonly encountered species in this                  status (NMFS, 2012; 2013), which may
                                                 from this region show consistent                        region. While catch data are incomplete               hinder the ability of the population to
                                                 evidence of a significant and continued                 and cannot be used to estimate                        rebound from the historical declines.
                                                 decline in thresher sharks, we must                     abundance levels or determine the                        As previously mentioned, the petition
                                                 consider this information in our 90-day                 magnitude of catches or trends for                    also states that logbook data from the
                                                 determination. Additionally, in the                     bigeye threshers at this time, pelagic                Eastern Central Pacific shows a
                                                 Southeastern United States, studies                     fishing effort in this region is high, with           historical decline of bigeye thresher
                                                 show significant declines in the species,               reported increases in recent years (IUCN              sharks due to pelagic fishing fleet
                                                 with decreases in CPUE indicating that                  assessment, 2009).                                    operations known to take this species.
                                                 the population of A. superciliosus has                     In conclusion, across the species’                 Trends in abundance and biomass of
                                                 declined by 70 percent from historical                  global range we find evidence                         thresher sharks in the eastern tropical
                                                 levels (Beerkircher et al., 2002).                      suggesting that population abundance of               Pacific Ocean were estimated by
                                                    For the Northeast Atlantic, there are                the bigeye thresher shark is declining or,            comparison of pelagic longline research
                                                 no population abundance estimates                       in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean, may                  surveys in the 1950s with recent data
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                                                 available, but data indicate that the                   be stable at a diminished abundance.                  (1990s); these data were collected by
                                                 species is taken in driftnets and gillnets.             While data are still limited with respect             observers on pelagic longline fishing
                                                 In the Mediterranean Sea, estimates                     to population size and trends, we find                vessels and standardized to account for
                                                 show significant declines in thresher                   the petition and our files sufficient in              differences in depth and soak time. For
                                                 shark abundance during the past two                     presenting substantial information on                 example, in the 1990’s, longliners
                                                 decades, reflecting data up to 2006.                    bigeye thresher shark abundance,                      deployed more hooks (averaging 2240
                                                 According to historical data compiled                   trends, or status to indicate the                     hooks per day compared to 322 hooks
                                                 using a generalized linear model,                       petitioned action may be warranted.                   in the 1950s) over a wider depth range


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                                                                        Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 154 / Tuesday, August 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                          48065

                                                 (down to 600 m compared to 200 m) for                   Additionally, thresher sharks comprised                  Indirect catch is another category of
                                                 longer periods. Thus, while catches of                  15 percent of fins genetically tested                 overutilization identified by the
                                                 thresher sharks increased (from 112                     from markets throughout Indonesia (the                petition, which states that post-release
                                                 threshers in the 1950s survey to 511                    largest shark catching country in the                 mortality may be high in the species.
                                                 threshers in the 1990s survey), this                    world), with bigeye threshers making up               However, no information is provided in
                                                 analysis estimated a decline in                         an estimated 7.6 percent of all fins                  the petition to connect the effect of
                                                 combined thresher abundance of 83                       tested. The high frequency of bigeye                  bycatch on population declines of the
                                                 percent, with a decline in mean biomass                 threshers in the markets across                       species. In the Northeast Atlantic and
                                                 to approximately 5 percent of virgin                    Indonesia provides some evidence that                 Mediterranean, while there are no target
                                                 levels and a decline in mean body mass                  they are not just caught incidentally, but            fisheries for thresher sharks, they are
                                                 from 17 kg to 12 kg). While this analysis               are targeted by large-scale fisheries                 taken as bycatch in various fisheries,
                                                 was not species-specific (Ward and                      (Sembiring, 2015). In another genetic                 including the Moroccan driftnet fishery
                                                 Myers, 2005), we must consider this                     barcoding study of fins from United                   in the southwest Mediterranean. They
                                                 information in our 90-day finding given                 Arab Emirates, the fourth largest                     are also caught by industrial and semi-
                                                 the potential significant population                    exporter in the world of raw dried shark              industrial longline fisheries and by
                                                 decline of bigeye threshers in this                     fins to Hong Kong, the authors found                  artisanal gillnet fisheries. In our files,
                                                 region.                                                 that the Alopiidae family represented                 we found evidence that in the last two
                                                    In addition to broad commercial                      5.9 percent of the trade from Dubai,                  decades, thresher sharks (common and
                                                 harvest of the species, the petition states             with bigeye thresher comprising 2.31                  bigeye) have declined between 96 and
                                                 that direct catch related to the shark fin              percent (Jabado et al., 2015). Overall,               99 percent in abundance and biomass in
                                                 trade has resulted in population decline,               evidence that bigeye thresher sharks                  the Mediterranean Sea (Ferretti, 2008).
                                                                                                         (and threshers in general) are highly                    Although bigeye thresher sharks have
                                                 and that bigeye thresher sharks are
                                                                                                         valued for their fins, are possibly                   been a prohibited species in U.S.
                                                 targeted and preferentially retained for
                                                                                                         targeted in some areas, and comprise a                Atlantic commercial fisheries since
                                                 their fins. For example, the petition
                                                                                                         portion of the Hong Kong fin-trading                  2000, they are still incidentally taken as
                                                 stated in the Indo-West Pacific, a single
                                                                                                         auction suggests that this threat may                 bycatch on pelagic longlines and in
                                                 thresher fin can fetch US $250, creating
                                                                                                         impact the species.                                   gillnets on the East Coast. For example,
                                                 incentives that would drive                                                                                   in our files, we found that since the
                                                 overutilization. However, this statement                   In the Indian Ocean, the status and                prohibition on bigeye threshers came
                                                 is not entirely correct. While it is true               abundance of shark species is poorly                  into effect in 2000, approximately 1,493
                                                 that high prices are paid for thresher                  known despite a long history of research              lbs, dressed weight (677 kg) of bigeye
                                                 sharks, the value of US $250 was not for                and more than 60 years of commercial                  thresher were landed in the Atlantic
                                                 a single fin, but rather for the entire                 exploitation by large-scale tuna fisheries            (NMFS, 2012; 2014) despite its
                                                 shark (Gilman et al., 2007). Still, in                  (Romanov et al., 2010). Pelagic sharks,               prohibited status. In 2010, the United
                                                 comparison to other sharks (e.g.,                       including bigeye threshers, are targeted              States reported that bigeye thresher
                                                 shortfin mako only fetches US $50 per                   in various fisheries, including semi-                 represented the second largest amount
                                                 shark), thresher sharks appear to be                    industrial, artisanal, and recreational               of dead discards in the Atlantic
                                                 highly valued and consequently targeted                 fisheries. Countries that fish for various            commercial fleet, reporting a total of 46
                                                 for both their meat and fins. While the                 pelagic species of sharks include: Egypt,             t (NOAA, 2010 Report to ICCAT). In
                                                 petition did not provide any                            India, Iran, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Sudan,               2011, this number dropped to 27 t of
                                                 information connecting population                       United Arab Emirates, and Yemen,                      bigeye thresher dead discards (NOAA,
                                                 declines as a result of this direct catch,              where the probable or actual status of                2011 Report to ICCAT). Further, several
                                                 evidence suggests that the three thresher               shark populations is unknown, and                     recent reports assessing the
                                                 shark species, collectively, may account                Maldives, Kenya, Mauritius, Seychelles,               vulnerability of bigeye threshers and
                                                 for approximately 2.3 percent of the fins               South Africa, and United Republic of                  other pelagic sharks to bycatch in the
                                                 auctioned in Hong Kong, the world’s                     Tanzania, where the actual status of                  U.S. Atlantic pelagic longline fishery
                                                 largest fin-trading center (Clarke, 2006).              shark populations is presumed to range                characterized the bigeye thresher as
                                                 This translates to 0.4 million to 3.9                   from fully exploited to over-exploited                highly vulnerable (Cortes, 2010; Cortes,
                                                 million threshers that may enter the                    (Young, 2006). In 2013, an Ecological                 2012; Gallagher et al., 2014). These
                                                 global fin trade each year (Clarke, 2006),              Risk Assessment (ERA) was developed                   landings and dead discards may be
                                                 with bigeye thresher having the highest                 by the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission                   linked to declines in the species across
                                                 value and vulnerability to fishing                      (IOTC) Scientific Committee to quantify               the Northwest Atlantic portion of its
                                                 compared to the other thresher species                  which shark species are most at risk                  range; however, as discussed earlier,
                                                 (Cortés, 2010); still, the relative                    from the high levels of pelagic longline              conflicting logbook and observer data
                                                 proportion of each thresher shark                       fishing pressure. In this ERA, the IOTC               decrease the certainty of these trends
                                                 species comprising the shark fin trade is               Scientific Committee noted that A.                    (Cortés, 2007; Baum and Blanchard,
                                                 not available in this genus-level                       superciliosus received a high                         2010).
                                                 assessment and information on the                       vulnerability ranking (No. 2) for                        In the Southwest Atlantic Ocean, off
                                                 species-specific impact of this harvest                 longline gear, as the species is                      the coast of Brazil, bigeye threshers
                                                 on bigeye thresher shark abundance is                   characterized as one of the least                     represent almost 100 percent of thresher
                                                 not provided by the petitioner.                         productive shark species, and is highly               sharks caught in longline fisheries
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                                                 However, we found species-specific                      susceptible to catch in longline                      (Amorin, 1998). The landed catch and
                                                 evidence in our files that bigeye                       fisheries. The ERA also noted that the                CPUE of bigeye thresher shark in this
                                                 threshers may be highly utilized in the                 available evidence indicates                          fishery increased from 1971 to 1989,
                                                 shark fin trade. In a genetic barcoding                 considerable risk to the status of the                and then gradually decreased from 1990
                                                 study of shark fins from markets in                     Indian Ocean Alopias spp. stocks at                   to 2001; however, this does not
                                                 Taiwan, bigeye threshers were one of 20                 current catch levels, which, from 2000–               necessarily reflect stock abundance
                                                 species identified and comprised 0.07                   2011 was estimated to be 22,811 mt                    because changes in the depth of fishing
                                                 percent of collected fin samples.                       (Merua et al., 2013).                                 operations also occurred, which may


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                                                 48066                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 154 / Tuesday, August 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 have affected the time series. Thus,                    this part of the species’ range as a result           months (from July 2010 to January
                                                 further information is needed to resolve                of fishing mortality in longline fisheries.           2011). These data do not include live-
                                                 this. In our files, we found that bigeye                Given the high rates of bycatch-related               released bigeye thresher sharks (Ardill
                                                 threshers are also taken in Uruguayan                   mortality observed in this species                    et al., 2011), which reportedly have high
                                                 longline fisheries at similar levels. In                throughout other parts of its range (e.g.,            post-release mortality rates (IOTC,
                                                 one study, observer data from 2001–                     Northwest and Southwest Atlantic,                     2014). Observer data from Taiwanese
                                                 2005 recorded a total of 295 A.                         Indian Ocean, and Central Pacific), it is             longline fleets (with coverage ranging
                                                 superciliosus specimens, in which the                   likely the species experiences similar                from only 2.2 percent in 2004 to 20.8
                                                 species’ abundance was characterized as                 rates of bycatch-related mortality in this            percent in 2007) recorded a total of 445
                                                 ‘‘low’’ despite high fishing effort                     part of its range as well. Thus, it is likely         bigeye threshers bycaught from 2004–
                                                 (Berrondo et al., 2007). Further,                       that the historical and continued levels              2008, with approximately 61 percent
                                                 observer data from 1992–2000 showed                     of exploitation in this part of the                   discarded (Huang and Liu, 2010).
                                                 that bigeye threshers experience high                   species’ range are impacting the species,             Hooking mortality is apparently very
                                                 mortality in longline fisheries in the                  such that listing may be warranted.                   high in this region; therefore, the IOTC’s
                                                 Southwest Atlantic, with 54 percent                        We found evidence that bigeye                      regulation 10/12 that prohibits the
                                                 dead upon capture (Beerkircher et al.,                  threshers are known to interact with                  onboard retention of any part of any
                                                 2002). Given the declines reported in                   longline fisheries throughout the Indo-               thresher species and promotes live
                                                 other areas for which data are available                Pacific. In the Western and Central                   release of thresher sharks may be
                                                 throughout other parts of the species’                  Pacific, where sharks represent 25                    ineffective for the conservation of bigeye
                                                 range and the high fishing pressure from                percent of the longline fishery catch,                thresher sharks. For example, in the
                                                 fleets throughout the Southwest                         observer data showed that bigeye                      Portuguese longline fleet, bigeye
                                                 Atlantic, A. superciliosus may be                       thresher shark is the 7th most                        threshers experienced a high rate of at-
                                                 experiencing a level of exploitation in                 commonly bycaught species of shark out                vessel mortality of 68.4 percent (n = 19)
                                                 this part of its range that may increase                of a total 49 species reported by                     from May to September 2011 (Ardill et
                                                 its risk of extinction.                                 observers (Molony, 2007). We found                    al., 2011). The IOTC reported in 2014
                                                                                                         that bigeye threshers are commonly                    that ‘‘maintaining or increasing effort in
                                                    In the Eastern Central Pacific, the
                                                                                                         taken as bycatch in longline fisheries in             this region will probably result in
                                                 petition points to the fact that bigeye
                                                                                                         the Republic of the Marshall Islands, in              further declines in biomass,
                                                 threshers have been recorded as bycatch                 which they exhibit at-vessel and/or                   productivity and CPUE’’ for bigeye
                                                 in purse seine fleets operating in this                 post-release mortality of 50 percent, and             threshers (IOTC, 2014).
                                                 region, in which bigeye threshers                       nearly 99 percent are finned and                         Overall, there is considerable
                                                 comprised 1 percent of shark species                    subsequently discarded (Bromhead,                     uncertainty regarding the actual levels
                                                 caught during a Shark Characteristics                   2012). Further, in a species status                   of bycatch of bigeye thresher shark
                                                 Sampling Program conducted from                         snapshot for thresher sharks in the                   occurring throughout its range;
                                                 1994–2004 (Roman-Verdesoto and                          Western and Central Pacific, Clarke et                however, it is likely that these rates are
                                                 Orozco-Zöller, 2005). Bycatch for this                 al., (2011) identified significant                    significantly under-reported due to a
                                                 report was defined as sharks that were                  decreasing size trends for thresher                   lack of comprehensive observer
                                                 discarded dead after being removed                      sharks in tropical areas, which may be                coverage in areas of its range in which
                                                 from the net and placed on the vessel.                  indicative of population declines in                  the highest fishing pressure occurs, as
                                                 Since 2010, catches of thresher sharks in               these areas. It is thought that these                 well as a tendency for fishers to not
                                                 this fishery have fluctuated between 10                 findings most likely reflect trends of                record discards in fishery logbooks.
                                                 t and 14 t; however, in a preliminary                   bigeye threshers as they are the most                 Nevertheless, given the prevalence of
                                                 productivity-susceptibility assessment,                 common thresher species encountered                   bigeye threshers as incidental catch
                                                 bigeye threshers were characterized as                  in this region, with catches of common                throughout its range and the species’
                                                 having a low susceptibility to this                     and pelagic threshers characterized as                observed high hooking and post-release
                                                 fishery (IAATC, 2009). Complete                         rare or uncommon. Bigeye threshers are                mortality rates, combined with the
                                                 bycatch and discard data are not readily                also commonly caught by Hawaii                        species’ low productivity, bycatch-
                                                 available from longline fleets in the                   longline fisheries, particularly on deep-             related fishing mortality may be a threat
                                                 Eastern Pacific. In our files, we found                 set gear (Walsh et al., 2009), and                    placing the species at an increased risk
                                                 that bigeye thresher sharks are minor                   represented 4.1 percent of shark catches              of extinction.
                                                 components of U.S. West Coast                           from 1995–2006. While catches of                         The petition identified recreational
                                                 fisheries, taken incidentally and                       thresher sharks (Alopias spp.) have                   fishing as the fourth category of
                                                 presumably not overexploited, at least                  trended upward, actual landings of                    overutilization. In our files, we found
                                                 locally. The bigeye thresher occurs                     thresher sharks in Hawaii have                        evidence that thresher sharks,
                                                 regularly but in low numbers,                           decreased from 50 mt in 2001 to 16 mt                 particularly common threshers, are
                                                 comprising only approximately 9                         in 2010, presumably due to the                        valued by recreational sport fishermen
                                                 percent of common thresher catch                        implementation of state and Federal                   throughout the species’ U.S. East Coast
                                                 (PFMC, 2003). Overall, we found that                    laws regarding shark finning (NMFS,                   and West Coast range; however, bigeye
                                                 apart from blue and silky sharks, there                 2011).                                                threshers do not appear to be as
                                                 are no stock assessments available for                     In the Indian Ocean, while fisheries               important in recreational fisheries and
                                                 shark species in the Eastern Pacific, and               are directed at other species, bigeye                 are largely prohibited in many fisheries
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                                                 hence the impacts of bycatch on the                     threshers are commonly caught as                      within the United States. The petition
                                                 population are unknown (IATTC, 2014).                   bycatch and catch rates are considered                described results from Heberer (2010),
                                                 However, despite a lack of information                  high (IOTC, 2011; Hererra and Pierre,                 which identified the potential negative
                                                 regarding present levels of bycatch                     2011). For example, bycatch of bigeye                 impact of recreational fishing on the
                                                 occurring in other fisheries throughout                 threshers has been recorded in Japanese               survival of congener, A. vulpinus, by
                                                 the Eastern Pacific, as described earlier,              and Taiwanese longline fisheries.                     assessing post-release survivorship of
                                                 thresher sharks were estimated to have                  According to Japanese observer data,                  sharks captured using the caudal fin-
                                                 experienced an 83 percent decline in                    162 bigeye threshers were bycaught in 6               based techniques used by most


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                                                                        Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 154 / Tuesday, August 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                          48067

                                                 recreational fishermen in southern                      fishing of bigeye threshers. Finally,                 of the Convention of Migratory Species
                                                 California. As previously described,                    since prohibition of this species was                 (CMS) is also inadequate given that the
                                                 thresher sharks use their elongate upper                implemented in 1999, there has been no                United States and other range states are
                                                 caudal lobe to immobilize prey before it                observed recreational harvest of this                 not Member Parties to CMS and are
                                                 is consumed, and the majority of                        species, with the exception of years                  therefore not bound by the requirements
                                                 common thresher sharks captured in the                  2002 and 2006 (NMFS, 2014). The                       imposed by the Appendix II listing. The
                                                 southern California recreational fishery                petition did not provide, nor could we                petition further states that the
                                                 are hooked in the caudal fin and hauled-                find in our files, any information                    Convention text is only suggestive and
                                                 in backwards. This is significant                       regarding the threat of recreational                  not self-executing upon the listing of a
                                                 because common threshers are obligate                   fishing to bigeye threshers throughout                species. On the contrary, we find that a
                                                 ram ventilators that require forward                    the rest of the species’ range. Thus, we              CMS Appendix II listing now
                                                 motion to ventilate the gills (Heberer,                 find that the information presented in                encourages international cooperation
                                                 2010), and the reduced ability to extract               the petition, and in our files, does not              towards conservation of the species, and
                                                 oxygen from the water during capture,                   comprise substantial information that                 although the United States is not
                                                 as well as the stress induced from these                would lead us to conclude the species                 currently a party to CMS, the United
                                                 capture methods, may influence                          may have an increased risk of extinction              States is a signatory to a number of CMS
                                                 recovery following release. The findings                from overutilization as a result of                   instruments for the conservation of
                                                 of Heberer (2010) demonstrate that large                recreational fishing activities.                      various marine species, including
                                                 tail-hooked common thresher sharks                         Overall, trends in the North West and              sharks.
                                                                                                         Central Atlantic Ocean suggest that the
                                                 with prolonged fight times (≥85 min)                                                                             The petition also asserts that finning
                                                                                                         species experienced historical declines
                                                 exhibit a heightened stress response,                                                                         regulations and species-specific
                                                                                                         from overexploitation, but may be
                                                 which may contribute to an increased                                                                          retention bans are ‘‘inadequate’’ for
                                                                                                         stabilized and possibly increasing in
                                                 mortality rate. This work suggests,                                                                           protecting the bigeye thresher shark
                                                                                                         recent years, although there is
                                                 especially for larger thresher sharks, that                                                                   species because they may still be
                                                                                                         considerable uncertainty regarding these
                                                 recreational catch-and-release may not                                                                        caught, either directly or indirectly. The
                                                                                                         trends. Elsewhere across the species’
                                                 be an effective conservation-based                                                                            petition also cites several regional
                                                                                                         range, information in the petition and in
                                                 strategy for the species. A recent paper                                                                      fisheries management organizations
                                                                                                         our files suggests that the species may
                                                 by Sepulveda (2014) found similar                                                                             (RFMOs) that implement a 5 percent fin-
                                                                                                         continue to experience declines as a
                                                 evidence for high post-release mortality                result of overutilization from both direct            to-carcass ratio regulation, describes
                                                 of recreationally caught common                         and indirect fishing pressure. In                     what the petitioner contends are
                                                 thresher sharks in the California                       summary, the petition, references cited,              potential loopholes in those regulations,
                                                 recreational shark fishery. Their results               and information in our files comprise                 and states that these general regulations
                                                 demonstrated that caudal fin-based                      substantial information indicating that               are inadequate for the bigeye thresher
                                                 angling techniques, which often result                  listing may be warranted because of                   shark, whose larger fins make it a more
                                                 in trailing gear left embedded in the                   overutilization for commercial                        targeted species. The petition further
                                                 shark, can negatively affect post-release               purposes.                                             contends that species-specific retention
                                                 survivorship. This work suggests that                                                                         bans for bigeye threshers, such as the
                                                 mouth-based angling techniques can,                     Inadequacy of Existing Regulatory                     ones implemented by ICCAT and IOTC
                                                 when performed properly, result in a                    Mechanisms                                            that specifically prohibit the retention,
                                                 higher survivorship of released sharks.                    The petition points to ‘‘virtually non-            transshipping, landing, storing, selling,
                                                 The petition argues that because                        existent international regulatory                     or offering for sale any part or whole
                                                 common thresher sharks may exhibit                      protections’’ to assert that bigeye                   carcass of bigeye thresher sharks, are
                                                 high mortality in recreational fisheries                threshers qualify for listing due to the              also inadequate largely because they do
                                                 that bigeye threshers would likely                      inadequacy of existing regulatory                     not address incidental catch and
                                                 exhibit similar results. While this may                 mechanisms. For example, the petition                 subsequent high mortality rates of the
                                                 be true, in our files, we found no                      mentions the lack of protections from                 species. Based on the information
                                                 evidence to suggest that bigeye threshers               the Convention on International Trade                 presented in the petition and in our
                                                 are declining (or responding in a                       of Endangered Species (CITES) for the                 files, we find that the bigeye thresher
                                                 negative fashion) as a result of                        bigeye thresher shark, but then states                shark is highly valued for its fins, and
                                                 utilization by recreational fisheries.                  that even if the species was listed under             can be identified in the shark fin market
                                                 While it is not known if this species                   CITES, it would still be inadequate due               at the species level. While regulations
                                                 enters the California recreational fishery              to the fact that a CITES listing would                banning the finning of sharks are a
                                                 on any regular basis, presumably only                   only address threats associated with the              common form of shark management and
                                                 few are taken. Further, there are no                    international trade of the species, and               have been adopted by far more countries
                                                 records from the recreational fishery off               would not address such impacts as                     and regional fishery management
                                                 Oregon or Washington (NMFS, 2007),                      bycatch. Although a CITES Appendix II                 organizations than the petition lists (see
                                                 and in fact, fishing of all thresher                    listing or international reporting                    HSI, 2012), we agree with the petition
                                                 species is prohibited in Washington.                    requirements would provide better data                that due to high rates of hooking
                                                 Likewise, in the Northwest Atlantic,                    on the global catch and trade of the                  mortality observed in this species as a
                                                 bigeye threshers have been prohibited in                bigeye thresher shark, the lack of a                  result of incidental catch, prohibitions
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                                                 recreational fisheries by Federal                       CITES listing or requirements does not                on the retention of bigeye thresher or
                                                 regulations since 1999. Further, U.S.                   suggest that current regulatory                       restrictions on the finning of sharks may
                                                 states from Maine to Florida have                       mechanisms are inadequate to protect                  not be adequate to protect the bigeye
                                                 adopted the Interstate Fisheries                        the bigeye thresher shark population                  thresher from fishing mortality rates that
                                                 Management Plan (FMP) for Atlantic                      from becoming threatened or                           may contribute to its extinction risk,
                                                 Coastal Sharks adopted by the Atlantic                  endangered under the ESA. The petition                especially given the species’
                                                 States Marine Fisheries Commission                      also asserts that the recent listing of               significantly low productivity and
                                                 (ASMFC), which prohibits recreational                   bigeye thresher shark under Appendix II               intrinsic rate of population increase.


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                                                 48068                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 154 / Tuesday, August 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    In addition to the inadequacy of                     agree with the petition that these                    shark has the slowest population growth
                                                 international regulations, the petition                 regulations do not address the issue of               rate of all thresher sharks, with an
                                                 states that ‘‘while the U.S. has                        bycatch-related mortality of the species,             exceptionally low potential annual rate
                                                 attempted to protect the bigeye thresher                especially considering the fact that                  of population increase (0.002–0.009 or
                                                 shark in U.S. waters, piecemeal                         bigeye threshers are still bycaught in                1.6 percent) under sustainable
                                                 protections that fail to cover the species              U.S. fisheries.                                       exploitation (Cortés, 2008; Dulvy et al.,
                                                 throughout its migratory range have                       Overall, while measures may be                      2008; Smith et al., 2008). This makes
                                                 proven to be unsuccessful.’’ Though                     implemented to reduce bycatch, we                     them particularly vulnerable to any
                                                 U.S. regulations by their jurisdictional                found no evidence that these measures                 level of fisheries exploitation, whether
                                                 nature only cover U.S. fishers, we do                   have been incorporated into common                    targeted or caught as bycatch in fisheries
                                                 not agree that this makes them                          practice throughout the species’ range,               for other species. Given that bigeye
                                                 inadequate. We find that U.S. national                  particularly in areas where fishing                   thresher sharks are caught regularly as
                                                 fishing regulations include numerous                    pressure is most concentrated. Further,               incidental bycatch throughout its range
                                                 regulatory mechanisms for both sharks                   while numerous finning and species-                   and experience high mortality rates as a
                                                 in general, and bigeye threshers                        specific retention bans have been                     result, and that the species may be
                                                 specifically, that may help protect the                 implemented, these regulations fail to                targeted in some areas for its fins, the
                                                 species. For example, in the U.S.                       address the species’ high rate of                     species’ growth and reproductive factors
                                                 Atlantic, the bigeye thresher has been a                bycatch-related mortality. In summary,                may inhibit the species’ ability to
                                                 prohibited species in both commercial                   the petition, references cited, and                   recover from even moderate levels of
                                                                                                         information in our files comprise                     exploitation, thus placing the bigeye
                                                 and recreational fisheries since 2000
                                                                                                         substantial information indicating that               thresher shark at an increased risk of
                                                 and 1999, respectively, under the 1999
                                                                                                         the species may be impacted by the                    extinction as a result. In summary, the
                                                 Fishery Management Plan for Atlantic
                                                                                                         inadequacy of regulatory mechanisms in                petition, references cited, and
                                                 Tunas, Swordfish, and Sharks. In
                                                                                                         parts of its range, such that listing may             information in our files comprise
                                                 addition, current management measures
                                                                                                         be warranted.                                         substantial information indicating that
                                                 for the Atlantic shark fisheries include
                                                                                                         Other Natural or Manmade Factors                      the species is impacted by ‘‘other
                                                 the following: commercial quotas,
                                                                                                         Affecting Its Existence                               natural or manmade factors,’’ including
                                                 commercial retention limits, limited
                                                                                                                                                               the life history trait of slow
                                                 entry, time-area closures, and                             The petition states that the biological            productivity, such that listing the
                                                 recreational bag limits. Sharks are                     constraints of the bigeye thresher shark,             species may be warranted.
                                                 required to be landed with fins naturally               such as its low reproduction rate
                                                 attached to the carcass. Additionally,                  (typically 2–4 pups a year), coupled                  Summary of Section 4(a)(1) Factors
                                                 several U.S. states have prohibited the                 with a late age of maturity                              We conclude that the petition does
                                                 sale or trade of shark fins/products as                 (approximately 12–14 years for females,               not present substantial scientific or
                                                 well, including Hawaii, Oregon,                         and slightly earlier for males, between               commercial information indicating that
                                                 Washington, California, Illinois,                       9–10 years) contribute to the species’                the ESA section (4)(a)(1) threats of
                                                 Maryland, Delaware, New York, and                       vulnerability to harvesting and its                   ‘‘present or threatened destruction,
                                                 Massachusetts, subsequently decreasing                  inability to recover rapidly. We agree                modification, or curtailment of its
                                                 the United States’ contribution to the fin              with the petition that the bigeye                     habitat or range’’ or ‘‘disease or
                                                 trade. For example, after the state of                  thresher shark exhibits relatively slow               predation’’ may be causing or
                                                 Hawaii prohibited finning in its waters                 growth rates and low fecundity. An                    contributing to an increased risk of
                                                 in 2000 and required shark fins to be                   ecological risk assessment conducted to               extinction for the global population of
                                                 landed with their corresponding                         inform the International Commission for               the bigeye thresher shark. However, we
                                                 carcasses in the state, shark fin imports               the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas                    do conclude that the petition and
                                                 from the United States into Hong Kong                   (ICCAT) categorized the relative risk of              information in our files present
                                                 declined significantly (54 percent                      overexploitation of the 11 major species              substantial scientific or commercial
                                                 decrease, from 374 to 171 tonnes), as                   of pelagic sharks, including the bigeye               information indicating that the section
                                                 Hawaii could no longer be used as a fin                 thresher shark (Cortés et al., 2010,                 4(a)(1) factor ‘‘overutilization for
                                                 trading center for the international                    2012). The study derived an overall                   commercial, recreational, scientific, or
                                                 fisheries operating and finning in the                  vulnerability ranking for each of the 11              educational purposes,’’ as well as
                                                 Central Pacific (Miller, 2014). Except for              species, which was defined as ‘‘a                     ‘‘inadequacy of existing regulatory
                                                 smooth dogfish (Mustelus canis), the                    measure of the extent to which the                    mechanisms’’ and ‘‘other manmade or
                                                 U.S. Shark Conservation Act of 2010                     impact of a fishery [Atlantic longline]               natural factors,’’ may be causing or
                                                 protects all shark species, making it                   on a species will exceed its biological               contributing to an increased risk of
                                                 illegal to remove any of the fins of a                  ability to renew itself’’ (Cortés et al.,            extinction for the species.
                                                 shark (including the tail) at sea; to have              2010, 2012). This robust assessment
                                                 custody, control, or possession of any                  found that bigeye thresher sharks have                Petition Finding
                                                 such fin aboard a fishing vessel unless                 a combination of low productivity and                    Based on the above information and
                                                 it is naturally attached to the                         high susceptibility to pelagic longline               the criteria specified in 50 CFR
                                                 corresponding carcass; to transfer any                  gear, which places the bigeye thresher at             424.14(b)(2), we find that the petition
                                                 such fin from one vessel to another                     high risk of overexploitation to the                  and information readily available in our
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                                                 vessel at sea, or to receive any such fin               combined pelagic longline fisheries in                files present substantial scientific and
                                                 in such transfer, without the fin                       the Atlantic Ocean (Cortés et al., 2010,             commercial information indicating that
                                                 naturally attached to the corresponding                 2012). In fact, of the 11 species                     the petitioned action of listing the
                                                 carcass; or to land any such fin that is                examined in this study, Atlantic bigeye               bigeye thresher shark worldwide as
                                                 not naturally attached to the                           thresher sharks were identified as one of             threatened or endangered may be
                                                 corresponding carcass, or to land any                   the most vulnerable and least                         warranted. Therefore, in accordance
                                                 shark carcass without such fins                         productive shark species. Even within                 with section 4(b)(3)(A) of the ESA and
                                                 naturally attached. However, we do                      the genus Alopias, the bigeye thresher                NMFS’ implementing regulations (50


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                                                                        Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 154 / Tuesday, August 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                48069

                                                 CFR 424.14(b)(3)), we will commence a                   information relevant to whether the                   enforcement information. We request
                                                 status review of the species. During the                bigeye thresher shark is endangered or                that all information be accompanied by:
                                                 status review, we will determine                        threatened. Specifically, we are                      (1) Supporting documentation such as
                                                 whether the species is in danger of                     soliciting information in the following               maps, bibliographic references, or
                                                 extinction (endangered) or likely to                    areas: (1) Historical and current                     reprints of pertinent publications; and
                                                 become so within the foreseeable future                 distribution and abundance of this                    (2) the submitter’s name, address, and
                                                 (threatened) throughout all or a                        species throughout its range; (2)                     any association, institution, or business
                                                 significant portion of its range. We now                historical and current population                     that the person represents.
                                                 initiate this review, and thus, we                      trends; (3) life history in marine
                                                                                                         environments, including identified                    References Cited
                                                 consider the bigeye thresher shark to be
                                                 a candidate species (69 FR 19975; April                 nursery grounds; (4) historical and                     A complete list of references is
                                                 15, 2004). Within 12 months of the                      current data on bigeye thresher shark                 available upon request to the Office of
                                                 receipt of the petition (April 27, 2016),               bycatch and retention in industrial,                  Protected Resources (see ADDRESSES).
                                                 we will make a finding as to whether                    commercial, artisanal, and recreational
                                                 listing the species as endangered or                    fisheries worldwide; (5) historical and               Authority
                                                 threatened is warranted as required by                  current data on bigeye thresher shark
                                                                                                                                                                 The authority for this action is the
                                                 section 4(b)(3)(B) of the ESA. If listing               discards in global fisheries; (6) data on
                                                                                                                                                               Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
                                                 the species is found to be warranted, we                the trade of bigeye thresher shark
                                                                                                                                                               amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).
                                                 will publish a proposed rule and solicit                products, including fins, jaws, meat,
                                                 public comments before developing and                   and teeth; (7) any current or planned                   Dated: August 5, 2015.
                                                 publishing a final rule.                                activities that may adversely impact the              Samuel D. Rauch III,
                                                                                                         species; (8) ongoing or planned efforts to            Deputy Assistant Administrator for
                                                 Information Solicited                                   protect and restore the species and its               Regulatory Programs, National Marine
                                                   To ensure that the status review is                   habitats; (9) population structure                    Fisheries Service.
                                                 based on the best available scientific                  information, such as genetics data; and               [FR Doc. 2015–19551 Filed 8–10–15; 8:45 am]
                                                 and commercial data, we are soliciting                  (10) management, regulatory, and                      BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Document Created: 2016-09-27 22:25:01
Document Modified: 2016-09-27 22:25:01
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
Action90-day petition finding, request for information, and initiation of status review.
DatesInformation and comments on the subject action must be received by October 13, 2015.
ContactChelsey Young, NMFS, Office of Protected Resources (301) 427-8491.
FR Citation80 FR 48061 
RIN Number0648-XD94
CFR Citation50 CFR 223
50 CFR 224

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