[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 215 (Tuesday, November 8, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 67451-67457]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-24306]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
[Docket No. 221031-0228; RTID 0648-XR125]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife; 90-Day Finding on a Petition
To List Great Hammerhead Shark as a Threatened or Endangered Species
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; 90-Day petition finding.
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SUMMARY: We, NMFS, announce a 90-day finding on a petition to list the
great hammerhead shark (Sphyrna mokarran) as threatened or endangered
under the
[[Page 67452]]
Endangered Species Act (ESA) and to designate critical habitat. We find
that the petition does not present substantial scientific or commercial
information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the petition and related materials are available
from the NMFS website at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/endangered-species-conservation/negative-90-day-findings.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Maggie Miller, NMFS Office of
Protected Resources, (301) 427-8457, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On June 16, 2022, we received a petition from the Center for
Biological Diversity (CBD) to list the great hammerhead shark as a
threatened or endangered species under the ESA and to designate
critical habitat concurrent with the listing. We have previously
reviewed the status of the great hammerhead shark for listing under the
ESA as a result of two petitions received in 2012 and 2013. We
completed a comprehensive status review of the great hammerhead shark
in response to these petitions, and based on the best scientific and
commercial information available, including the status review report
(Miller et al. 2014), we determined that the species was not comprised
of distinct population segments (DPSs), was not currently in danger of
extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range, and
was not likely to become so within the foreseeable future. Therefore,
on June 11, 2014, we published a final determination, the 12-month
finding, that the great hammerhead shark did not warrant ESA listing
(79 FR 33509).
ESA Statutory, Regulatory, and Policy Provisions and Evaluation
Framework
Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the ESA of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531
et seq.), requires, to the maximum extent practicable, that within 90
days of receipt of a petition to list a species as threatened or
endangered, the Secretary of Commerce makes a finding on whether that
petition presents substantial scientific or commercial information
indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted, and promptly
publish such finding in the Federal Register (16 U.S.C. 1533(b)(3)(A)).
When it is found that substantial scientific or commercial information
in a petition indicates the petitioned action may be warranted (a
``positive 90-day finding''), we are required to promptly commence a
review of the status of the species concerned during which we will
conduct a comprehensive review of the best available scientific and
commercial information. In such cases, we conclude the review with a
finding as to whether, in fact, the petitioned action is warranted
within 12 months of receipt of the petition. Because the finding at the
12-month stage is based on a more thorough review that encompasses all
the best data available, as compared to the narrower scope of review at
the 90-day stage, a ``may be warranted'' finding does not prejudge the
outcome of the status review.
Under the ESA, a listing determination may address a species, which
is defined to also include subspecies and, for any vertebrate species,
any DPS that interbreeds when mature (16 U.S.C. 1532(16)). A joint
NMFS-U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) (jointly, ``the Services'')
policy clarifies the agencies' interpretation of the phrase ``distinct
population segment'' for the purposes of listing, delisting, and
reclassifying a species under the ESA (61 FR 4722, February 7, 1996). A
species, subspecies, or DPS is ``endangered'' if it is in danger of
extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range, and
``threatened'' if it is likely to become endangered within the
foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range
(ESA sections 3(6) and 3(20), respectively, 16 U.S.C. 1532(6) and
(20)). Pursuant to the ESA and our implementing regulations, we
determine whether species are threatened or endangered based on any one
or a combination of the following section 4(a)(1) factors: (1) the
present or threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of
habitat or range; (2) overutilization for commercial, recreational,
scientific, or educational purposes; (3) disease or predation; (4)
inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms to address identified
threats; (5) or any other natural or manmade factors affecting the
species' existence (16 U.S.C. 1533(a)(1), 50 CFR 424.11(c)).
ESA-implementing regulations issued jointly by the Services (50 CFR
424.14(h)(1)(i)) define ``substantial scientific or commercial
information'' in the context of reviewing a petition to list, delist,
or reclassify a species as credible scientific or commercial
information in support of the petition's claims such that a reasonable
person conducting an impartial scientific review would conclude that
the action proposed in the petition may be warranted. Conclusions drawn
in the petition without the support of credible scientific or
commercial information will not be considered ``substantial
information.'' In reaching the initial (90-day) finding on the
petition, we will consider the information described in sections 50 CFR
424.14(c), (d), and (g) (if applicable) and may also consider
information readily available at the time the determination is made (50
CFR 424.19(h)(ii)).
Our determination as to whether the petition provides substantial
scientific or commercial information indicating that the petitioned
action may be warranted will depend in part on the degree to which the
petition includes the following types of information: (1) current
population status and trends and estimates of current population sizes
and distributions, both in captivity and the wild, if available; (2)
identification of the factors under section 4(a)(1) of the ESA that may
affect the species and where these factors are acting upon the species;
(3) whether and to what extent any or all of the factors identified in
section 4(a)(1) of the ESA, alone or in combination, may cause the
species to be an endangered species or threatened species (i.e., the
species is currently in danger of extinction or is likely to become so
within the foreseeable future), and, if so, how high in magnitude and
how imminent the threats to the species and its habitat are; (4)
adequacy of regulatory protections and effectiveness of conservation
activities by States as well as other parties, that have been initiated
or that are ongoing, that may protect the species or its habitat; and
(5) a complete, balanced representation of the relevant facts,
including information that may contradict claims in the petition (50
CFR 424.14(d)).
We may also consider information readily available at the time the
determination is made (50 CFR 424.14(h)(1)(ii)). We are not required to
consider any supporting materials cited by the petitioner if the
petitioner does not provide electronic or hard copies, to the extent
permitted by U.S. copyright law, or appropriate excerpts or quotations
from those materials (e.g., publications, maps, reports, letters from
authorities) (50 CFR 424.14(c)(6)).
The ``substantial scientific or commercial information'' standard
must be applied in light of any prior reviews or findings we have made
on the listing status of the species that is the subject of the
petition. Where we have already conducted a finding on, or review of,
the listing status of that species (whether in response to a petition
or on our own initiative), we will evaluate any petition received
thereafter seeking to list, delist, or reclassify that species to
[[Page 67453]]
determine whether a reasonable person conducting an impartial
scientific review would conclude that the action proposed in the
petition may be warranted despite the previous review or finding. Where
the prior review resulted in a final agency action--such as a final
listing determination, 90-day not-substantial finding, or 12-month not-
warranted finding--a petition will generally not be considered to
present substantial scientific and commercial information indicating
that the petitioned action may be warranted unless the petition
provides new information or analysis not previously considered (50 CFR
424.14(h)(1)(iii)).
At the 90-day finding stage, we do not conduct additional research,
and we do not solicit information from parties outside the agency to
help us in evaluating the petition. We will accept the petitioners'
sources and characterizations of the information presented if they
appear to be based on accepted scientific principles, unless we have
specific information in our files that indicates the petition's
information is incorrect, unreliable, obsolete, or otherwise irrelevant
to the requested action. Information that is susceptible to more than
one interpretation or that is contradicted by other available
information will not be dismissed at the 90-day finding stage, so long
as it is reliable and a reasonable person conducting an impartial
scientific review would conclude it supports the petitioners'
assertions. In other words, conclusive information indicating the
species may meet the ESA's requirements for listing is not required to
make a positive 90-day finding. We will not conclude that a lack of
specific information alone necessitates a negative 90-day finding if a
reasonable person conducting an impartial scientific review would
conclude that the unknown information itself suggests the species may
be at risk of extinction presently or within the foreseeable future.
To make a 90-day finding on a petition to list a species, we first
evaluate whether the petition presents substantial scientific or
commercial information indicating the subject of the petition may
constitute a ``species'' eligible for listing under the ESA. If so, we
evaluate whether the information indicates that the species may face an
extinction risk such that listing, delisting, or reclassification may
be warranted; this may be indicated in information expressly discussing
the species' status and trends, or in information describing impacts
and threats to the species. We evaluate whether the petition presents
any information on specific demographic factors pertinent to evaluating
extinction risk for the species (e.g., population abundance and trends,
productivity, spatial structure, age structure, sex ratio, diversity,
current and historical range, habitat integrity or fragmentation), and
the potential contribution of identified demographic risks to
extinction risk for the species. We then evaluate whether the petition
presents information suggesting potential links between these
demographic risks and the causative impacts and threats identified in
section 4(a)(1) of the ESA.
Information presented on impacts or threats should be specific to
the species and should reasonably suggest that one or more of these
factors may be operative threats that act or have acted on the species
to the point that it may warrant protection under the ESA. Broad
statements about generalized threats to the species, or identification
of factors that could negatively impact a species, do not constitute
substantial information indicating that listing may be warranted. We
look for information indicating that not only is the particular species
exposed to a factor, but that the species may be responding in a
negative fashion; then we assess the potential significance of that
negative response.
Many petitions identify risk classifications made by
nongovernmental organizations, such as the International Union for
Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the American Fisheries Society, or
NatureServe, as evidence of extinction risk for a species. Risk
classifications by other organizations or made under other Federal or
state statutes may be informative, but such classification alone will
not provide a sufficient rationale for a positive 90-day finding under
the ESA. For example, as explained by NatureServe, their assessments of
a species' conservation status do ``not constitute a recommendation by
NatureServe for listing under the U.S. Endangered Species Act'' because
NatureServe assessments ``have different criteria, evidence
requirements, purposes and taxonomic coverage than government lists of
endangered and threatened species, and therefore these two types of
lists should not be expected to coincide'' (https://explorer.natureserve.org/AboutTheData/DataTypes/ConservationStatusCategories). Additionally, species classifications
under IUCN and the ESA are not equivalent; data standards, criteria
used to evaluate species, and treatment of uncertainty are also not
necessarily the same. Thus, when a petition cites such classifications,
we will evaluate the source of information that the classification is
based upon in light of the standards on extinction risk and impacts or
threats discussed above.
Analysis of Petition
We have reviewed the petition, the literature cited in the
petition, and other literature and information readily available in our
files. The petitioners mainly assert that the recent 2019 IUCN
assessment of the great hammerhead shark (Rigby et al. 2019), which
designated the global species as ``critically endangered,'' means that
the species satisfies the listing criteria under the ESA.
As discussed above, we must evaluate any petition seeking to list a
species in light of any prior reviews or findings we have already made
on the species that is the subject of the petition (50 CFR
424.14(h)(1)(iii)). Because our previous review resulted in a final
agency action finding that the great hammerhead shark was not in danger
of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range, and
was not likely to become so within the foreseeable future, we
considered whether the petition provides new information or a new
analysis not previously considered. Unless the petition provides
credible new information, identifies errors, or provides a credible new
analysis, the petition generally would not be considered to present
substantial information indicating that the petitioned action may be
warranted (50 CFR 424.14(h)(1)(iii)). Below, we address the main points
made in the petition, including the information used by the 2019 IUCN
assessment (Rigby et al. 2019), and discuss whether this information
was considered in our status review report (Miller et al. 2014) and 12-
month finding for the great hammerhead shark (79 FR 33509, June 11,
2014), or instead is credible new information.
Population Status and Trends
The petitioner discusses the 2019 IUCN assessment of the great
hammerhead population (Rigby et al. 2019), stating that the assessment
found a global population reduction of >80 percent over three
generation lengths (71.1-74.4 years), with particularly steep declines
in the Indian Ocean (median reduction of 99.3 percent over three
generation lengths). There were three data sources that the IUCN
assessment used to determine the overall global population reduction.
Two of these data sources, the Indian Ocean data (Dudley and
Simpfendorfer 2006) and the North Atlantic data (Jiao
[[Page 67454]]
et al. 2011) were both analyzed in our great hammerhead shark status
review report (Miller et al. 2014) that preceded and provided the basis
for the 2014 finding. As such, this is not new information that would
indicate a change in the status of the species. The third data source
in the IUCN assessment (J. Carlson unpublished data), which was not
considered in our status review report, provided new and additional
North Atlantic information that showed an increase in median population
change of great hammerhead sharks over three generation lengths. As
such, that data supported classification of the great hammerhead shark
in the IUCN Red List category of Least Concern (see Rigby et al. 2019:
Supplementary Information) and does not constitute new information that
would indicate the petitioned action may be warranted. Additionally,
NMFS is currently undertaking a stock assessment for the great
hammerhead shark in U.S. Atlantic waters as part of the SouthEast Data,
Assessment, and Review (SEDAR) cooperative process for hammerhead
sharks. Based on the SEDAR Workshop Working Papers (publicly available
at: https://sedarweb.org/assessments/sedar-77), a preliminary
examination of trends in abundance from five data sources, including
the ones in Rigby et al. (2019), indicates that since 1994 the
population is increasing at about 2 percent per year.
The petition also noted steep declines of hammerheads in the
Mediterranean Sea, referencing Ferretti et al. (2008); however, again,
this study was considered in our status review report of the great
hammerhead shark (Miller et al. 2014). Within the status review report,
we noted that although Ferretti et al. (2008) has been referenced as a
study that estimated a decline of >99.99 percent in Sphyrna spp.
abundance and biomass, the authors acknowledge that they could only
assess S. zygaena, or smooth hammerhead shark. Great hammerhead sharks
are essentially rare in the Mediterranean Sea and are considered a
transient species (Miller et al. 2014). As such, the information that
the petition provided does not apply to the great hammerhead shark
species.
In conclusion, information readily available in our files suggests
the great hammerhead shark population is increasing in the U.S.
Atlantic region, which provides important context for judging the
accuracy and reliability of the information presented in the petition.
Further, the petition does not provide any credible new information
that was not already considered in our great hammerhead shark status
review report (Miller et al. 2014) supporting the prior not warranted
finding or otherwise offer substantial information that would suggest
that the species' current population status and trends may warrant the
petitioned action.
Information on Impacts and Threats to the Species
Next, we evaluated whether the information in the petition, viewed
in context of information readily available in our files concerning the
extent and severity of one or more of the ESA section 4(a)(1) factors,
credibly suggests these impacts and threats may be posing a risk of
extinction for the great hammerhead shark. The petition states that
four of the five general causal factors in section 4(a)(1) of the ESA
are adversely affecting the continued existence of the great hammerhead
shark: (A) present or threatened destruction, modification, or
curtailment of habitat or range; (B) overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational purposes; (D) inadequacy of
existing regulatory mechanisms; and (E) other natural or manmade
factors affecting its continued existence. In the following sections,
we use the information presented in the petition and in our files to
determine whether the petitioned action may be warranted.
Present or Threatened Destruction, Modification, or Curtailment of
Habitat or Range
First, the petition incorrectly identifies the great hammerhead
shark as a ``benthopelagic'' species, not a coastal-pelagic and semi-
oceanic species (79 FR 33509, June 11, 2014). The petition states that
as a benthopelagic species, the great hammerhead shark occupies most of
the water column and is vulnerable to human activities from the surface
to the seafloor. The petition cites the reference of Thoburn et al.
(2019) to support that statement; however, this reference is about tope
sharks (Galeorhinus galeaus), not great hammerhead sharks. The petition
also states that great hammerhead sharks are considered highly
susceptible to anthropogenic pressures near coastlines and in offshore
environments but references Leonetti et al. (2020), which also mentions
tope sharks and is about sharks and rays in the Mediterranean. As
mentioned above, great hammerhead sharks are rare or a transient
species in the Mediterranean, and the petition contains no information
that suggests that the great hammerhead shark is similar to the species
analyzed in Leonetti et al. (2020) nor supports an inference that the
great hammerhead shark specifically is ``highly susceptible'' to
unspecified anthropogenic pressures near coastlines or in offshore
environments of the Mediterranean or anywhere else. Therefore the
petition statements are not supported by credible scientific or
commercial information. Such unsupported conclusions are not considered
``substantial information'' under our regulations (50 CFR
424.14(h)(1)(i)).
The petition also states that climate change and coastal
development are especially harmful to the great hammerhead shark given
the species' dependence on tropical and sub-tropical coral reefs;
however, as noted in our great hammerhead shark status review report
(Miller et al. 2014), great hammerhead sharks do not show any
dependence on coral reefs. The petition also did not provide any
reference for that statement. The petition proceeds to suggest that
global climate change, ocean warming, ocean acidification, habitat
degradation and destruction associated with coastal and ocean
development, and human-caused impacts on important coral reef habitats
are putting the great hammerhead shark at a greater risk of extinction.
However, the petition fails to provide any species-specific information
on the impacts of these developments on the great hammerhead shark. The
petition mentions that both ocean warming and ocean acidification are
wreaking havoc on reef ecosystems worldwide and threatening coral reef
habitats, including those that purportedly provide important habitat
for great hammerhead sharks, but does not provide any references that
discuss or identify the specific great hammerhead shark habitat that
may be impacted. As mentioned in our great hammerhead shark status
review report (Miller et al. 2014), the great hammerhead shark is a
circumtropical species that lives in coastal-pelagic and semi-oceanic
waters from latitudes of 40[deg] N to 31[deg] S. It occurs over
continental shelves as well as adjacent deep waters, and while it may
also be found in coral reefs and lagoons, there is no information
presented in the petition that suggests, contrary to the prior status
review report, that reef ecosystems worldwide are important habitats
for the species.
The petition also states that ocean acidification threatens the
great hammerhead shark directly but provides no references or
scientific evidence that supports this statement. Rather, the petition
cites Dixson et al. (2014), Rosa et al. (2017), Piestevos et al. (2015)
and Dziergwa et al. (2019), which are studies that examine the effects
of ocean acidification on different species of sharks, but not the
great hammerhead
[[Page 67455]]
shark. Dixson et al. (2014) examined the smooth dogfish (Mustelus
canis), Rosa et al. (2017) examined 10 benthic shark species, Piestevos
et al. (2015) examined the temperate Port Jackson shark (Heterodontus
portusjacksoni), and Dziergwa et al. (2019) examined a demersal shark
species, Puffadder shyshark (Haploblepharus edwardsii). Clearly, none
of these shark species (which are demersal, benthic, and temperate)
share similar habitat conditions as the great hammerhead shark, a
coastal-pelagic and semi-oceanic shark. Additionally, none of the
referenced papers suggest the shark species discussed are biologically
similar to the great hammerhead shark. The status review report, on the
other hand, discussed a paper (Chin et al. 2010) that examined climate
change factors, including ocean acidification, on great hammerhead
sharks on Australia's Great Barrier Reef, and found that great
hammerhead sharks were ranked as having a low overall vulnerability to
climate change, with low vulnerability to each of the assessed climate
change factors, including ocean acidification (Miller et al. 2014). As
such, the referenced studies do not constitute substantial information
to support the petition's statement regarding the threat of ocean
acidification to the great hammerhead shark species.
The petition also claims that habitat degradation and destruction
associated with coastal and ocean development, specifically the
placement of high voltage subsea cables, threatens the great hammerhead
shark with extinction. This information appears to have been copied
from a separate petition (pertaining to the tope shark) and does not
provide any evidence of high voltage direct current subsea cables
negatively impacting the great hammerhead shark. The petition
references the IUCN tope shark assessment (Walker et al. 2020), which
does not mention great hammerhead shark impacts from any subsea cables,
and also references Taormina et al. (2018) and Carter et al. (2009),
neither of which addresses great hammerhead shark impacts.
Overall, the petition fails to present credible, accurate
information to constitute substantial scientific or commercial
information indicating that the present or threatened destruction,
modification, or curtailment of habitat or range is a threat to the
great hammerhead shark.
Overutilization for Commercial, Recreational, Scientific, or
Educational Purposes
The petition relies solely on the IUCN assessment of the great
hammerhead shark (Rigby et al. 2019), specifically the global
population reduction, as support for its statement that dramatic
declines of the species around the world are evidence that
overexploitation is a threat posed to the species. However, the
petition does not provide any new information specific to the species
that was not already considered in our great hammerhead shark status
review report (Miller et al. 2014). As stated above, there were only
three data sources that the IUCN assessment used to determine the
overall global population reduction, and two of these data sources, the
Indian Ocean data (Dudley and Simpfendorfer 2006) and one for the North
Atlantic (Jiao et al. 2011) were both analyzed in our great hammerhead
status review report (Miller et al. 2014). The third data source, which
was not considered in the status review report (J. Carlson unpublished
data; see Rigby et al. 2019: Supplementary Information), actually
showed an increase in median population change of great hammerhead
sharks, over three generation lengths, in the North Atlantic. As such,
this supports our conclusion from the 12-month finding (79 FR 33509,
June 11, 2014) that there is no evidence that overutilization, by
itself, is a threat that is currently placing the species at an
increased risk of extinction. The severity of the threat of
overutilization is dependent upon other risks and threats to the
species, such as its abundance (as a demographic risk) as well as its
level of protection from fishing mortality throughout its range;
however, the petition does not provide any credible new information or
otherwise offer substantial scientific or commercial information
suggesting the species is at or near a level of abundance that places
its current or future persistence at risk due to overutilization.
Therefore, we conclude the petition does not present substantial
scientific information indicating that listing may be warranted due to
overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific, or
educational purposes.
Inadequacy of Existing Regulatory Mechanisms
The petition states that current conservation regulations are
ineffective to ensure the survival of the great hammerhead shark, yet
does not provide any reference or new evidence of the ineffectiveness
of current regulatory mechanisms. The petition mentions many of the
Regional Fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs) (i.e.,
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas
(ICCAT), Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission, Western and Central
Pacific Fisheries Commission, and General Fisheries Commission for the
Mediterranean) and their implementation of prohibitions, the
designation of great hammerhead sharks as a priority for conservation
and management, as well as the defeat of proposals to ban hammerhead
landings or set fishing limits. The petition also mentions the addition
of great hammerhead sharks to Appendix II of the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora.
However, these conservation regulations were also evaluated in our
great hammerhead shark status review report (Miller et al. 2014) and
12-month finding (79 FR 33509, June 11, 2014). The petition also states
that the ICCAT adopted the recommendation prohibiting retention,
transshipment, landing, and sale of great hammerheads (and other
hammerhead species) for ICCAT fisheries operating in the Convention
Area, but it has not prevented the continued decline of the species in
the Convention Area. However, as mentioned previously, this statement
is not supported. Moreover, the petition did not provide any evidence
of a decline, and the IUCN assessment of great hammerhead sharks (Rigby
et al. 2019) actually showed a potential increase in median population
change of great hammerhead sharks over three generation lengths in the
North Atlantic (J. Carlson unpublished data), which is part of the
ICCAT Convention Area.
The petition proceeds to state that national regulations are also
inadequate to protect the great hammerhead shark from extinction;
however, again, the petition does not provide any evidence of the
ineffectiveness of current regulatory mechanisms affecting the great
hammerhead shark's status or provide new information that was not
already considered in our great hammerhead shark status review report
(Miller et al. 2014) and 12-month finding (79 FR 33509, June 11, 2014).
In terms of our national regulations, and as stated in the 12-month
finding (79 FR 33509, June 11, 2014), we found that U.S. conservation
and management measures are adequate in decreasing the extinction risk
of the great hammerhead shark by minimizing demographic risks
(preventing further abundance declines) and the threat of
overutilization (strictly
[[Page 67456]]
managing and monitoring sustainable catch rates) currently and in the
foreseeable future. This has been further confirmed by new information
in our files, which, as mentioned above, shows that our preliminary
examination of great hammerhead shark trends in abundance in the U.S.
Atlantic indicates that since 1994 the population is increasing at
about 2 percent per year (https://sedarweb.org/assessments/sedar-77/).
As such, the petition fails to present credible new information, or
otherwise offer substantial scientific or commercial information
indicating that the inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms is a
threat to the great hammerhead shark.
Other Natural or Manmade Factors Affecting Its Continued Existence
The petition states that exposure to and bioaccumulation of
dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) and other pollutants and
contaminants likely have played a role in the decline of the great
hammerhead shark or can increase the species' risk of extinction.
However, none of the references or information provided by the petition
examined pollutant or contaminant levels within the great hammerhead
shark. The petition also failed to provide any evidence of a decline in
the species due to pollutants or contaminants.
Our prior finding, which considered whether the potential
bioaccumulation of toxins and metals was contributing to the extinction
risk for the great hammerhead shark, determined based on the best
available scientific and commercial information that this was not
significantly contributing to the species' extinction risk (79 FR
33518, June 11, 2014). Due to the absence of any information in the
petition to support extrapolating the referenced studies to the great
hammerhead shark and provide some indication that these constituents
may be affecting this species' abundance, the statements in the
petition are nothing more than unsupported conclusions. As such, the
petition fails to present credible new information or otherwise offer
substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that other
natural or manmade factors are a threat to the great hammerhead shark.
Similarity of Appearance Listing
The petition also requested that the great hammerhead shark be
listed due to its similarity of appearance to the scalloped hammerhead
shark (Sphyrna lewini), a species protected by the ESA since 2014 (79
FR 38213, July 3, 2014); however, the petition does not provide any
credible new information or otherwise offer substantial scientific or
commercial information that was not previously considered in our 12-
month finding for the great hammerhead shark, which already considered
the statutory factors regarding similarity of appearance (79 FR 33509,
June 11, 2014).
Section 4 of the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1533(e)) provides that the
Secretary may treat any species as an endangered or threatened species
even though it is not listed pursuant to section 4 of the ESA when the
following three conditions are satisfied: (1) Such species so closely
resembles in appearance, at the point in question, a species which has
been listed pursuant to such section that enforcement personnel would
have substantial difficulty in attempting to differentiate between the
listed and unlisted species; (2) the effect of this substantial
difficulty is an additional threat to an endangered or threatened
species; and (3) such treatment of an unlisted species will
substantially facilitate the enforcement and further the policy of this
chapter (16 U.S.C. 1533(e)(A)-(C)).
Although the great hammerhead shark and scalloped hammerhead shark
have similar features (such as a unique head shape), the petition does
not provide any references or new information that indicates our
enforcement personnel have substantial difficulty in differentiating
the two species. The great hammerhead shark is the largest of the
hammerhead shark species, and was noted to reach lengths of up to 610
cm total length (TL) (Compagno 1984); although recent sizes have
decreased in the species. Based on information in our great hammerhead
shark status review report (Miller et al. 2014), the largest great
hammerhead shark captured during a study in the northwestern Atlantic
Ocean and Gulf of Mexico was of 415 cm TL (Piercy et al. 2010). Piercy
et al. (2010) also noted sizes of up to 445 cm TL off northern
Australia and ~400 cm TL off South Africa for great hammerhead sharks.
On the other hand, observed maximum sizes of scalloped hammerhead
sharks are smaller and range from 331-346 cm TL (Stevens and Lyle 1989,
Chen et al. 1990). In addition to their sizes, the shapes of their head
are also distinctive and aid in the differentiation of the two species.
In the great hammerhead shark, the front margin of the head is nearly
straight, forming a ``T-shape,'' with a shallow notch in the middle,
whereas the scalloped hammerhead shark has a broadly arched head, with
distinct indentations in the center as well as on either side of the
middle notch.
As stated in our 12-month finding (79 FR 33509, June 11, 2014), the
fins of these two species can also be distinguished without difficulty.
The great hammerhead shark has a very tall, distinctive, crescent-
shaped first dorsal fin whereas the first dorsal fin of a scalloped
hammerhead shark is shorter and has a rounded apex (Abercrombie et al.,
2013). According to a genetic study that examined the concordance
between assigned Hong Kong market categories and the corresponding
fins, the great hammerhead market category ``Gu pian'' had an 88
percent concordance rate, indicating that traders can accurately
identify and separate great hammerhead shark fins from the other
hammerhead species (Abercrombie et al. 2005, Clarke et al. 2006).
Given the distinctive head and body characteristics of the great
hammerhead shark and the scalloped hammerhead shark, and evidence that
fins of the species can also be accurately identified and separated, we
are aware of no evidence to suggest that enforcement personnel may have
substantial difficulties in attempting to differentiate between the
great hammerhead shark and the scalloped hammerhead shark. Therefore,
we do not find that the petition presents any new or substantial
scientific or commercial information indicating that a similarity of
appearance listing may be warranted at this time.
Petition Finding
We thoroughly reviewed the information presented in the petition,
in context of information readily available in our files, and found
that it does not provide any credible new information regarding great
hammerhead sharks or otherwise offer substantial information not
already considered in our status review report of the great hammerhead
shark (Miller et al. 2014) and 12-month finding (79 FR 33509, June 11,
2014). As such, we find that the petition does not present substantial
scientific or commercial information indicating that the petitioned
action may be warranted.
References Cited
A complete list of all references cited herein is available upon
request (See FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
Authority: The authority for this action is the Endangered Species
Act of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).
[[Page 67457]]
Dated: November 1, 2022.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2022-24306 Filed 11-7-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P