
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Hollywood has given sharks a terrible reputation. But in reality, the finned fish should be far more scared of us, than we of them.
Millions of sharks are killed in fishing nets and lines every year.
One statistical claim seems to sum up the scale of this slaughter – that 100 million sharks are killed every year, or roughly 11,000 per hour.
But how was this figure calculated, and what exactly does it mean?
We go straight to the source and speak to the researcher who worked it out, Dr Boris Worm, a professor in marine conservation at Dalhousie University in Canada.
Presenter: Lizzy McNeill
By BBC Radio 44.7
766766 ratings
Hollywood has given sharks a terrible reputation. But in reality, the finned fish should be far more scared of us, than we of them.
Millions of sharks are killed in fishing nets and lines every year.
One statistical claim seems to sum up the scale of this slaughter – that 100 million sharks are killed every year, or roughly 11,000 per hour.
But how was this figure calculated, and what exactly does it mean?
We go straight to the source and speak to the researcher who worked it out, Dr Boris Worm, a professor in marine conservation at Dalhousie University in Canada.
Presenter: Lizzy McNeill

7,701 Listeners

529 Listeners

1,046 Listeners

289 Listeners

5,431 Listeners

2,121 Listeners

1,931 Listeners

35 Listeners

344 Listeners

433 Listeners

416 Listeners

827 Listeners

246 Listeners

351 Listeners

73 Listeners

480 Listeners

358 Listeners

227 Listeners

140 Listeners

320 Listeners

3,192 Listeners

5,162 Listeners

63 Listeners

820 Listeners

998 Listeners

3,084 Listeners

495 Listeners

614 Listeners

115 Listeners

288 Listeners

266 Listeners

64 Listeners

80 Listeners

3 Listeners