Categories: Lifestyle

Shark Week! Dangerous Truth of Shark Finning

Shark enthusiasts are rejoicing this week as Discovery Channel’s “Shark Week” returns to the small screen. Personally, I started off watching the highly-anticipated predatory series Sunday evening with some fine (organic boxed) wine, delicious cheese and a  good friend.

Although the media portrays sharks as a threat, there’s only an average of 5-10 human fatalities per year due to shark attacks… You’re more likely to be killed hornets, wasps, bees or dogs.

Yet an estimated 73 million sharks are killed yearly – from habitat loss, pollution, overfishing, and most of all, shark finning.  This gross hunting encourages fishermen to hunt the sharks, cut off their fins, and toss them back into the ocean where they can no longer swim… leaving them to die on the ocean floor. Painfully and slowly. This billion dollar industry is disturbing – it would be pretty much be equivalent to if we were chopping off a deer’s 4 legs and leaving them in the woods.

Shark Fin Soup is a Chinese Delicacy – and with prices that average over $100, it’s a status symbol for weddings and business meetings. Yet the shark fins have no nutritional or medicinal value. Ironically, the shark fins don’t even have flavor and are purely in there for the… status.

Because of shark’s slow reproductive process, we could wipe out the populations in 10-20 years if shark finning continues at the current rate!  What would happen if sharks die?  As top of the food chains/apex predators, sharks keep every other species in the food chain in balance, weeding out the sick, injured and dying so that populations of fish stay strong and healthy. Otherwise, the entire balance of the ocean’s food chain is in danger.

For example, Shark Savers previewed this during a scientific study in the mid-Atlantic US when 11 species of sharks were nearly eliminated. 12 of the 14 species those sharks once fed on became so plentiful that they damaged the ecosystem, including wiping out the species farther down the food chain on which they preyed. The negative effects trickle down.

Luckily legislation and bans are increasing – there’s a bill in California to ban the sale and possession of shark fins. Celebs including Leonardo DiCaprio, Scarlett Johansson, basketball player Yao Ming & pop star Ke$ha are all supporting the CA law.  Hawaii has already passed the ban with fines up to $50,000 + a year in prison to offenders.  Outside the US, Chile and other countries have started passing Shark Finning bans.

So what can you do to help to stop shark finning?

Happy Shark Week!

Posted by Julie

Julie Hancher

Julie Hancher is Editor-in-Chief of Green Philly, sharing her expertise of all things sustainable in the city of brotherly love. She enjoys long walks in the park with local beer and greening her travels, cooking & cat, Sir Floofus Drake.

Recent Posts

Earth week: Winner of SBN’s Food Saver Challenge, Swarthmore’s Solar purchase & more

Read the latest sustainability news. Earth Day was Monday is every day, and was celebrated…

3 days ago

Four Ways to Improve Recycling in Philly

Recycling in Philly is broken. Here’s how Mayor Parker’s administration could fix it. Recycling in…

4 days ago

The EPA’s Efforts in Climate Action, Public Engagement, and Earth Month Initiatives

We sat down with Adam Ortiz, EPA's Mid-Atlantic Regional Administrator to chat about transparency and…

1 week ago

Is My Recycling Being … Recycled?

Philadelphians' skepticism about the City’s waste policies has led to an abysmal recycling rate. Here’s…

2 weeks ago

City is driving more EVs, new PFAS regulations, car-free MLK is back!

Read the latest local sustainability news. Can you believe the solar eclipse was this past…

2 weeks ago

How to find a green job in 2024

With more companies embracing the triple bottom line, finding a career that matches your values…

3 weeks ago