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Klimat & miljö 5.1

Atlantic shark fishing threatens tourism economy in the Azores

A new study documents how industrial longline fisheries are catching the same shark species that fuel a growing ecotourism industry in Portugal's Azores islands. The conflict between High Seas fishing and marine tourism reveals a blind spot in blue economy planning: emerging ocean industries can cannibalize one another without regulatory oversight.

Originaltitel: Watching or catching sharks: Tracing the emergence of a marine resource conflict in the North Atlantic

Abstrakt

<p>Oceans are facing severe pressure from human activities, compromising the resilience of marine ecosystems. In response, blue economy initiatives aim to foster less extractive maritime sectors, yet emerging industries risk conflict with established ones over shared resources. One such challenge is the exploitation of pelagic shark species in the North Atlantic, particularly the blue shark (<em>Prionace glauca</em>) and the shortfin mako shark (<em>Isurus oxyrinchus</em>), which are caught by longline fisheries operating on the High Seas. Concurrently, these species have become key attractions for dive tourism in the Azores, raising concerns about the compatibility of shark fishing and ecotourism. This study examines the role of shark diving in Azorean marine tourism and assesses whether High Seas shark fisheries constitute a conflicting activity. Employing process tracing and semi-structured interviews, the study explores the origins and economic significance of shark diving in the Azores and evaluates the impact of fisheries by tracing three decades of shark catch volumes and related policy developments in the North Atlantic. While blue shark sightings in the Azores remain relatively stable, we identify a significant decline in shortfin mako sightings over the last decade, suggesting a causal effect of overfishing. Given the migratory, pelagic characteristics of the two species, this case documents a rare instance of an interest conflict between ecotourism and commercial fisheries in the North Atlantic. The findings offer valuable insights into blue sector conflicts and underscore the need for further exploration of these dynamics in relation to the EU’s Blue Growth initiative.</p>

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