The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species

Nebrius ferrugineus

 – Vulnerable

Taxonomy

Kingdom: ANIMALIA
Phylum: CHORDATA
Class: CHONDRICHTHYES
Order: ORECTOLOBIFORMES
Family: GINGLYMOSTOMATIDAE
Scientific Name: Nebrius ferrugineus
Species Authority: (Lesson, 1830)
Common Name/s:
EnglishTAWNY NURSE SHARK

Assessment Information

Red List Category & Criteria: VU A2abcd+3cd+4abcd    ver 3.1 (2001)
Year Assessed: 2003
Assessor/s: Pillans, R. (SSG Australia & Oceania Regional Workshop, March 2003)
Evaluator/s: Fowler, S., Cavanagh, R.D. & Kyne, P.M. (Shark Red List Authority)
Justification: A widely distributed continental and insular shelf species of the Indian, west and central Pacific Oceans. Restricted to a narrow band of shallow water habitat (5 to 30 m, occasionally to 70 m) that is heavily fished throughout all its range except Australia. Taken in inshore fisheries (demersal trawls, floating and fixed bottom gill nets and baited hooks) in Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines, Pakistan and India. Although there are limited data on population declines in these areas, reports of local extinctions in India and Thailand, combined with its narrow habitat range, apparently limited dispersion and low fecundity, indicate that the species is highly susceptible to local inshore fisheries and has declined in a large proportion of its range. Within Australia it is assessed as Least Concern because it is widely distributed and abundant, captured only in very small numbers in gillnets and beach meshing.

Geographic Range

Range Description: Found on continental and insular shelves of the Indo-Pacific, often in the intertidal zone and from the surf line down to a depth of 70 m but more commonly between 5 and 30 m.
Countries: Native:

Australia (New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, Western Australia); Bahrain; China; Djibouti; Egypt; Eritrea; India; Indonesia; Iran, Islamic Republic of; Japan; Kuwait; Madagascar; Malaysia; Maldives; Marshall Islands; Mauritius; Mozambique; New Caledonia; Palau; Papua New Guinea; Philippines; Qatar; Samoa; Saudi Arabia; Seychelles; Singapore; Somalia; South Africa; Sudan; Taiwan, Province of China; Thailand; United Arab Emirates; Viet Nam; Yemen

FAO Marine Fishing Areas: Native:

Indian Ocean-eastern; Indian Ocean-western; Pacific-eastern central; Pacific-northwest; Pacific-southwest; Pacific-western central

Population

Population Trend: Down

Habitat and Ecology

Habitat and Ecology: It occurs on or near the bottom in lagoons, in channels or along outer edges of coral and rocky reefs, in areas with seagrass and sand on reefs, sandy areas near reef and off sandy beaches. It prefers areas in crevices and caves. Young prefer crevices in shallow lagoons but adults are more wide ranging.

Life History:
Ovoviviparous (aplacental viviparity) with uterine cannibalism in the form of oophagy. Pregnant females from Okinawa had one or two foetuses per uterus (297 to 595 mm) with the yolk sac reabsorbed and a greatly expanded stomach filled with yolky material in the larger fetuses and also had egg cases in the uterus (Teshima et al. 1995). It appears as though this species practices oophagy on relatively large, cased nutritive eggs (unlike lamnoids which have very small nutritive eggs) and is the first orectoloboid known to have uterine cannibalism. It is not known if the foetuses eat each other (adelphophagy) as with the grey nurse shark (Carcharias taurus).

Reproductive periodicity: Unknown
Size at birth: 40 to 80 cm total length (TL)
Average litter size: At least four per uterus suggested from egg cases, but the large size differences between foetuses in a litter suggests the litters are smaller, possible only one per female (Compagno 2001).
Size male maturity: 250 cm TL
Size female maturity: 230 to 290 cm TL
Max size: to at least 320 cm TL
Growth rates: Unknown
System: Marine
List of Habitats:
9.1Marine Neritic - Pelagic
9.8Marine Neritic - Coral Reef
9.9Marine Neritic - Seagrass (Submerged)
10.1Marine Oceanic - Epipelagic (0-200m)
13.4Marine Coastal/Supratidal - Coastal Brackish/Saline Lagoons/Marine Lakes

Threats

Threats: Threats within Australia are likely to be minimal, there are no target fisheries, although it is taken in inshore fisheries throughout much of the rest of its range.

In the Gulf of Thailand, it was historically more abundant and it may have been adversely affected by the use of explosives and poisons on reefs in the Indian Ocean and western Pacific, particularly Indonesia and the Philippines (Compagno 2001). Nebrius ferrugineus often form small aggregations during the day and have a limited home range, with individuals returning to the same area every day after foraging. This behaviour together with small litter size, large size at maturity and inshore habitat suggest that it is vulnerable to local population depletion in areas of heavy fishing pressure. Furthermore, its docility and habit of resting in caves and crevices during the day make it susceptible to capture and harassment by divers, and reef destruction.
List of Threats:
1.3.2.2Habitat Loss/Degradation - Extraction - Fisheries - Artisinal/small-scale (ongoing)
1.3.2.3Habitat Loss/Degradation - Extraction - Fisheries - Large-scale/industrial (ongoing)
4.1.1.4Accidental mortality - Bycatch - Fisheries-related - Dynamite (ongoing)
4.1.1.5Accidental mortality - Bycatch - Fisheries-related - Poisoning (ongoing)
9.2Intrinsic factors - Poor recruitment/reproduction/regeneration (ongoing)
9.9Intrinsic factors - Restricted range (ongoing)
10.1Human disturbance - Recreation/tourism (ongoing)

Conservation Actions

Conservation Actions: There are currently no conservation measures in place for this species.
List of Conservation Actions:
0No conservation actions (in place)
3.2Research actions - Population numbers and range (needed)
3.9Research actions - Trends/Monitoring (needed)

Bibliography

Bibliography:

Compagno, L.J.V. 2001. Sharks of the world. An annotated and illustrated catalogue of shark species known to date. Vol. 2. Bullhead, mackeral and carpet sharks (Heterodontiformes, Lamniformes and Orectolobiformes). FAO species catalogue for fisheries purposes. No. 1. Vol. 2. FAO, Rome.

Last, P.R. and Stevens, J.D. 1994. Sharks and Rays of Australia. CSIRO, Australia.

Shark Specialist Group. For more information, see the Specialist Group website.

Teshima, K., Kamei, Y., Toda, M. and Uchida, S. 1995. Reproductive mode of the tawny nurse shark taken from the Yaeyama Islands, Okinawa, Japan with comments on individuals lacking the second dorsal fin. Bull. Seikai Natl. Fish. Res. Inst. 73: 1-12


Citation: Pillans, R. 2003. Nebrius ferrugineus. In: IUCN 2007. 2007 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 30 August 2008.
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