The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna & Flora (CITES)

CITES is an international agreement between governments that regulates trade. With 183 member states (‘Parties’), CITES provides a framework for monitoring and controlling trade in wild animals and plants, so as not to threaten their survival.

Over 35,000 species of plants and animals (covering specimens, products, and derivatives) are listed under CITES, including 46 species of sharks and rays (on Appendices I and II). By regulating trade in species that cross international borders (on land and at sea), CITES can be a valuable tool in reducing over-exploitation and driving national management plans.

This system seeks to ensure international trade in listed species is sustainable, legal, and traceable.

Species are proposed for listing by a Party on one of three Appendices.

  • APPENDIX I – International commercial trade is prohibited except in exceptional circumstances. Includes species threatened with extinction.

  • APPENDIX II – Trade is controlled under specific conditions. Species are not necessarily threatened with extinction at this time.

  • APPENDIX III – A certificate of origin is required to trade. Species are protected in at least one country, which has asked other CITES Parties for help in controlling trade.


CITES COP19 – What is happening in November 2022

The 19th meeting of the CITES – to be held in Panama City from the 14th to the 25th of November 2022 – is expected to be the largest global gathering of people focused on international wildlife trade since CITES came into force in 1975.

The CITES CoP19 shark and ray proposals include the following species: 

Requiem (Carcharhinidae) sharks

Panama’s CoP19 proposal includes the following 19 requiem sharks:   

Critically Endangered: Smalltail Shark; Ganges Shark; Borneo Shark; Pondichery Shark; Daggernose Shark; Lost Shark; Pacific Smalltail Shark

Endangered: Grey Reef Shark; Dusky Shark; Sandbar Shark; Smoothtooth Blacktip Shark; Sharptooth Lemon Shark; Caribbean Reef Shark; Night Shark; Whitenose Shark; Blacknose Shark; Whitecheek Shark; Borneo Broadfin Shark; Broadfin Shark

and the remainder of family Carcharhinidae as lookalikes.

 

The bonnethead shark and hammerhead shark species

The EU has proposed to list the bonnethead shark, with family Sphyrnidae (hammerhead sharks) as lookalikes, on Appendix II.

The proposal is also for the inclusion of all  species in the family Sphyrnidae (hammerhead sharks) which are not already listed in CITES Appendix II, including:

Critically Endangered: Scoophead Shark; Smalleye Hammerhead; Scalloped Bonnethead

Endangered: Winghead Shark

Data Deficient: Carolina Hammerhead

 

Guitarfish species

Israel's proposal is to list six Critically Endangered species of guitarfishes and the remaining Guitarfishes as lookalikes in Appendix II. 35 of the 37 proposed species are in decline, 23 are classified by as Endangered; and 10 of them are Critically Endangered.

Freshwater stingray species

Brazil has proposed to list Potamotrygon wallacei and Potamotrygon leopoldi in Appendix II.


WHAT IS THE PROCESS AT CITES?

The Conference of the Parties (CoP) is usually held once every three years, with interim Committee sessions.

Proposals for listing are submitted by Parties in advance and then discussed during the CoP. If a consensus isn’t reached, each proposal is then subject to a vote where it must be supported by a two thirds majority in Committee – it must then be agreed upon in the final Plenary session. If formally adopted, there is a standard 90-day period (although extensions can be requested) before listings are enforced and CITES Parties should implement the new international trade obligations.


WHICH SHARKS & RAYS ARE LISTED ON CITES?


APPENDIX I:

  • Sawfishes - (All 5 species: Narrow, Dwarf, Smalltooth, Green, and Largetooth Sawfish) listed on App I by CoP16 (2013) 

APPENDIX II:

  • Basking Shark – listed in 2002 (previously listed on App III in 2000)

  • Whale Shark – listed in 2002

  • White Shark – listed in 2004 (previously listed on App III in 2001)

  • Porbeagle - listed in 2013

  • Oceanic Whitetip Shark - listed in 2013

  • Hammerheads (3 species: Great, Scalloped, and Smooth hammerheads) - listed in 2013

  • Manta Rays (2 species: Giant and Reef Manta) - listed in 2013

  • Devil Rays Mobula spp. (9 species: Sicklefin, Spinetail, Shortfin, Giant, Bentfin, Smoothtail, Atlantic, Lesser Guinean, and Pygmy Devil Rays) - listed in 2016

  • Thresher sharks (All 3 species: Bigeye, Common, and Pelagic threshers) - listed in 2016

  • Silky Shark - listed in 2016

  • Mako sharks (2 species: Shortfin Mako with Longfin Mako included as a look-alike species) – listed in 2019

  • Giant guitarfishes (6 species: Blackchin Guitarfish and the Sharpnose Guitarfish. with 4 additional Giant Guitarfishes included as look-alike species (Giant, Halavai, Clubnose, and Widenose Guitarfish)) - listed in 2019

  • Wedgefishes (10 species: Bottlenose Wedgefish and Whitespotted Wedgefish, with the remaining 8 included as look-alike species (Bowmouth Guitarfish, False Shark Ray, Clown, Smoothnose, Taiwanese, Broadnose, Eyebrow, and African Wedgefish)) - listed in 2019

APPENDIX III:

  • Freshwater stingrays (Potamotrygonidae spp.) - 23 species listed in 2017


CITES CoP18

The 18th Conference of the Parties (CoP18) to CITES, was 17–28 August 2019 in Geneva, Switzerland. We were there with our Global Shark and Ray Initiative (GSRI) colleagues and other partners, working in support of new proposals and implementation of existing listings.

Three elasmobranch proposals (for mako sharks, giant guitarfishes and wedgefishes) were adopted at CITES CoP18, listing 18 new shark and ray species on Appendix II.

This now means that countries must track exports and high-seas take, as well as demonstrate that internationally traded products from these species are legally sourced from sustainable fisheries.

While CITES listing is a positive step, fisheries management is urgently needed – with adoption and enforcement of catch limits central to demonstrating sustainability. As part of the No Limits? campaign to end uncontrolled shark fishing, we'll continue to urge the EU and ICCAT to immediately ban retention of North Atlantic Shortfin Mako.

CITES CoP19 will be hosted in Panama in 2022.


EFFECTIVE SHARK CONSERVATION

Complementary fishing limits and measures to reduce incidental catch are key to effective species conservation.

While CITES does not directly affect shark mortality, it should influence the need for sustainable fisheries management. A number of permits are required when landing CITES listed species caught in high-seas waters or traded across international borders, to show where they’ve come from and that they’re from sustainable populations.

If properly implemented, this is good news for pelagic species where landings are mostly from high-seas waters (e.g. Shortfin Mako). Otherwise, without high-seas catch limits it would be challenging to prove sustainable fishing. However, for those CITES listed sharks caught within a nation’s waters (Exclusive Economic Zone or EEZ) there are no trade restrictions on domestic landings or internal trade – so we still need effective catch limits to ensure sustainable management of these domestic fisheries.

The Shark Trust’s overarching conservation goals are reflected in our work at CITES.

  1. SPECIES PROTECTION - protection of endangered species through legislation and effective conservation action;

  2. RESPONSIBLE TRADE - promoting responsible trade and reducing demand for non-sustainable shark products; and linking to the need for...

  3. SUSTAINABLE FISHERIES MANAGEMENT


Related Links:

► Press Release: Eighteen Shark & Ray Species Granted New Global Trade Controls at Wildlife Conference – 28 August 2019

► Press Release: Conservationists Welcome Shark & Ray Listings at CITES CoP (pdf) - 4 October 2016

► See
 cites.org for more on the legal framework and listings.