A Future For a Forgotten Predator: Assessment of the Global and Regional Legal Frameworks For Protection and Recovery of the Caribbean Sawfishes Pristis Pristis and Pristis Pectinata and Recommendations For the Course Forward

Olga Koubrak

    Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

    Abstract

    Two species of sawfish, Pristis pristis and Pristis pectinata, used to be common in the coastal waters of the Caribbean Region. However, due to direct and incidental fishing pressures, national and international trade in body parts, and habitat loss, the populations of these ecologically and culturally significant species have drastically declined. This thesis identifies and reviews global and regional, binding and non-binding legal instruments in effect in the Caribbean Region that encourage states to protect biodiversity in general or address identified threats to sawfishes specifically. Despite the presence of obligations that call upon states to adopt sawfish conservation and habitat protection measures, declining numbers of these fishes in the Caribbean suggest deficiencies in the operation and implementation of the reviewed instruments. The thesis recommends steps that countries, intergovernmental organizations, and conservationists could take to secure a future for these remarkable species.

    Original languageCanadian English
    QualificationPh.D.
    Supervisors/Advisors
    • VanderZwaag, David, Advisor, External person
    Publication statusPublished - Jan. 1 2016

    Keywords

    • law
    • sawfishes
    • endangered species
    • Caribbean
    • biodiversity
    • conservation

    Disciplines

    • Animal Law
    • Comparative and Foreign Law
    • Environmental Law
    • International Law
    • International Trade Law
    • Law
    • Law of the Sea
    • Natural Resources Law

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