Bluntnose sixgill shark (Hexanchus griseus) COSEWIC assessment and status report: chapter 1

Assessment Summary

Assessment Summary – April 2007 Common name: Bluntnose Sixgill Shark Scientific name: Hexanchus Griseus Status: Special Concern Reason for designation: This large (maximum reported length 4.8 m), heavy-bodied shark is a benthic species that is widely distributed over continental and insular shelves in temperate and tropical seas throughout the world.  In Canadian Pacific waters, it is found in inlets and along the continental shelf and slope typically at depths greater than 91 m (range 0-2500 m).  In the absence of information about population structure, it is treated as a single population for assessment purposes.  The present population size and abundance trends are not known.  The only available abundance index, encounter rates with immature sharks at a shallow site in the Strait of Georgia, has decreased significantly (>90%) in the last five years.  This index is not likely representative of the overall abundance trend because only immature sharks are encountered and the site is shallow relative to the preferred depth range.  The principal known threat to the species is fishing.  This shark has been the focus of at least three directed fisheries in Canadian waters, most recently in the late 1980s and early 1990s.  It continues to be caught as bycatch, but survival of released sharks is unknown.  Sharks observed by divers sometimes show scars from entanglement in fishing gear.  Because of its late age of maturity (18-35 yr for females), it is likely susceptible to overfishing even at low levels of mortality.  Little is known about the abundance and movement patterns of this species elsewhere in the world, so the potential for a rescue effect is unknown. Occurrence: Pacific Ocean Status history: Designated Special Concern in April 2007. Assessment based on a new status report.

Page details

Date modified: