Sawfish research in Mexico, Central and South America
By Ruth H. Leeney
In Peru, Planeta Océano launched a sawfish research programme in early
2015, in collaboration with my organisation, Protect Africa's Sawfishes. This involved a short training programme covering aspects of sawfish ecology and conservation, as well as interview methods for assessing the status of sawfish populations. The training course attracted participants not only from Peru but also from Ecuador and Colombia. Following the training, course participants and
Planeta Océano staff conducted interviews at numerous fishing ports and
landings sites in northern Peru, and interviews will be conducted further south,
later this year. Very recent captures of largetooth sawfish have occurred in
northern Peru, including one adult caught and released alive in February 2015. Planeta
Océano has also built collaborative links with teams in Ecuador, El Salvador
and Costa Rica, supporting them to collect data on sawfishes using similar
methods, and developing community awareness activities and educational
materials on sawfishes, to be used throughout the region. Planeta Océanos’
collaborators at the Universidad Laica Eloy Alfaro de Manabí (Ecuador), led by
Dr. Rigoberto Rosas-Luis, have already conducted 429 interviews with fishermen throughout
Ecuador. The most recent capture of a sawfish there was in 2014, in San
Lorenzo, northern Ecuador.
Central and South America are also key regions for sawfish conservation
for one particular reason – the cock-fighting industry. Cock-fighting is a very
popular pastime in many Central and South American countries, and since the
mid-1970s, sawfish rostral teeth have been the preferred source of ‘spurs’ – the
sharp spikes which owners attach to the feet of their bird in order to inflict
damage on the opponent. Concern has grown within the cock-fighting industry as
sawfish rostra have become more difficult to obtain and the price of rostral
teeth has increased significantly. However, some cock-fighting associations are
now working to ban the use of spurs made from rostral material and to encourage
the use of artificial spurs. In Peru, Planeta Océano is conducting interviews
with members of these associations, in order to assess the frequency with which
sawfish teeth are still used as spurs and to better understand how
cock-fighting associations can encourage their members to use alternative
materials. There may be the potential to develop outreach materials that can be
used throughout the Americas in countries where cock-fighting is popular, in
order to minimise any further threat to sawfishes via the demand for rostral
teeth.
The collaborative nature of sawfish research in this region is a
wonderful example of how, through communication and sharing of resources, numerous
small research projects can result in effective data collection and better
geographic cover. This collaborative approach is also creating links between
NGOs, researchers and government organisations which will enable a smoother
transition to the next, equally important phase of this work: developing a
regional conservation strategy for sawfishes, in line with the IUCN’s Global
Sawfish Conservation Strategy (Harrison & Dulvy 2014). Exciting times for
sawfish research and conservation in the Americas!
Many thanks to all the researchers who provided details of their projects for this article, and to the many funders supporting this much-needed work.
This article first appeared in the IUCN SSG's newsletter, 10th November 2015.
Two sawfish species – the smalltooth and largetooth sawfishes (Pristis pectinata and P. pristis) – are known to have occurred
historically in Caribbean and Central American (Atlantic) coastal seas, whilst
only the largetooth sawfish is known from the eastern Pacific. The current status
of sawfishes in the waters of Mexico, Central America and the west coast of
South America is poorly understood. Until recently, little up-to-date information
was available from these regions but happily, since 2014, numerous research
projects have developed to address these data gaps. Many of these projects are
multi-country collaborative efforts, which facilitates the sharing of resources
and expertise. In my role as Sawfish Conservation Coordinator for the IUCN Shark Specialist Group, I recently compiled information about the sawfish research projects underway in Mexico, Mesoamerica and South America, and put the various researchers and teams involved in contact with each other where necessary. The information I received from teams working on sawfish projects is summarised below, but if
you are working on sawfishes in these regions and don’t see your
project mentioned here, please do get in touch!
In Mexico, Océanos Vivientes AC is conducting a nationwide survey of
historical and current presence of sawfishes, in order to evaluate the
conservation status of sawfishes in Mexico. The team hopes to work towards a
change in Mexican legislation relating to sawfishes. Océanos Vivientes is also
collaborating with Conservation International to develop sawfish research in
Colombia.
MarAlliance is working in Belize, Cuba, Guatemala, Honduras and on the
Caribbean coast of Mexico. Their work on sawfishes is part of a broader programme
which involves working closely with fishing communities to monitor marine
megafauna, especially elasmobranchs. They hope to assess the current existence
of sawfishes in each of their study regions, document historical occurrence,
distribution and local uses of sawfishes, and identify strategies to encourage
the recovery of any remaining sawfish populations.
A largetooth sawfish (c. 5.6 m total length) captured off northern Peru, and released alive, in February 2015. |
Dr. Rosas-Luis interviewing fish vendors in northern Peru. |
Fundación Talking Oceans and the Smithsonian Institution is conducting
sawfish research in Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia and Ecuador. They aim to assess
the current distribution and conservation status of sawfishes in the ETP, as
part of a wider project to identify and map elasmobranch critical habitats and assess
MPA effectiveness. Fundación Talking Oceans are working with a number of
collaborators including Marviva, WWF, USAID-BIOREDD, Universidad de Costa Rica,
Playa Tortuga, Malangwai, SINAC, PRETOMA, Universidad de Panama, ARAP, Planeta
Océano and NAZCA.
Juliana Lopez Angarita and a fisherman with a sawfish rostrum from a market in Costa Rica. Photograph (c) Alex Tilley. |
Cock-fighting spurs made from plastic composites. |
Many thanks to all the researchers who provided details of their projects for this article, and to the many funders supporting this much-needed work.
This article first appeared in the IUCN SSG's newsletter, 10th November 2015.