The hammerhead shark population was the hardest hit, declining 89 percent since 1986.
Not exact matches
Hammerhead sharks, which have recently received new protections from the UN Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals, are experiencing drastic
population declines in excess of 90 % in several parts of world.
Buddy up with dive size fish at the world famous Cod Hole, witness Osprey Reef's
shark population including
hammerheads and grey whalers and cruise the Ribbon Reefs.
Great news for marine animals: an enormous area around Cocos Island, also called «
Shark Island» for it's high
population of the apex predators, is now a safe haven for species from
hammerhead sharks to leatherback turtles.
Critically endangered
populations of
hammerhead and oceanic white tip
sharks have plummeted by 70 % and 99 % in the North Atlantic respectively according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.