Species behavior drives Red Sea conservation plans

In the Red Sea, 31 shark species and 29 ray species have been recorded. (Danah Marine
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Updated 07 February 2026
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Species behavior drives Red Sea conservation plans

  • Behavioral insights from sharks and rays are driving targeted marine protection strategy

JEDDAH: The Red Sea hosts over 40 shark species, making it one of the region’s most biologically diverse marine environments. Their presence is a key indicator of healthy waters and balanced ecosystems, according to the Red Sea Authority.

Silky sharks, a large pelagic species common around offshore reefs and drop-offs, occupy a critical space between reef and open-ocean ecosystems. Among the most heavily harvested sharks in the region and globally, they are a growing conservation concern.

Though often solitary, silky sharks form seasonal aggregations of 20 or more at a few Red Sea sites, including locations in Sudan, Yemen, and Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Surveys at the Jeddah site, dating to the 1990s, show significant population declines.

DID YOU KNOW?

• Only a small fraction of critical shark habitats are protected.

• Sharks do not always leave when it gets hotter, they swim deeper.

• Silky sharks can stay surprisingly local.

• The Red Sea is a hotspot for threatened species.

Recent research led by Collin Williams, a research scientist at Neom, shows that rather than migrating from warming waters, Red Sea silky sharks adapt by moving to deeper depths in response to rising surface temperatures.

Williams told Arab News: “Silky sharks are among the most prolific sharks in the Red Sea.” 

He noted that Saudi Arabia hosts the best-documented aggregation of the species.




Halavi Guitarfish

Evidence suggests silky sharks reproduce in the Red Sea, supported by sightings of juveniles and pregnant females in scientific literature. However, the recent study focused on movement patterns and depth use rather than pinpointing breeding or nursery habitats. Ongoing research, including ultrasound scanning, aims to better define key reproductive areas.

Jesse Cochran, a research scientist at King Abdullah University for Science and Technology, said: “The Red Sea’s high temperatures let us observe what sharks do when they are pushed toward thermal extremes. In this case, the sharks didn’t simply disappear, they shifted deeper.”

KAUST scientists are using Important Shark and Ray Areas and tracking studies to strengthen conservation in the Red Sea. ISRAs identify critical habitats, revealing many fall outside current marine protected zones. Tagging research, including on silky sharks (Carcharhinus falciformis), shows sharks adjust depth rather than leaving the area as temperatures rise.

Together, these approaches close knowledge gaps on habitat use, human pressures, and climate impacts, supporting science-based conservation and marine planning aligned with Saudi Vision 2030.




Tawny Nurse Shark. (SUPPLIED)

“ISRAs are a practical bridge between science and decision-making,” Cochran said. “By identifying and mapping known critical habitats with the best available evidence, they provide key information that managers can actually act on.”

Seasonal shifts in the Red Sea often manifest not as absence, but as changes in vertical habitat use. Silky sharks, for example, spend the hottest months at greater depths, reducing visibility in surface or shallow-reef surveys. Similar patterns are observed in whale shark research, which shows seasonal aggregation near Al-Lith followed by widespread foraging across the central and southern Red Sea.

Cochran added: “The Red Sea gives us a window into how sharks may behave near their upper thermal limits, letting us study climate responses with real conservation relevance.”

The Red Sea and Western Indian Ocean host highly diverse shark and ray communities, including whale sharks, scalloped hammerheads, reef manta rays, and reef sharks. This diversity reflects the wide range of habitats and life histories marine planning must consider. Yet conservation concerns remain acute for range-restricted species, which face limited data and high vulnerability. The ISRA assessment warns of potential extinctions among species such as the Red Sea torpedo ray.

Climate change compounds these risks. Research on silky sharks shows rising surface temperatures compress habitat use into narrower depth ranges, potentially increasing fishing exposure. Williams noted that, contrary to prior assumptions, these sharks do not migrate elsewhere in summer but instead retreat to deeper waters.




Redticulated Whipray. (SUPPLIED)

“Sharks are vulnerable when concentrated, because they are easier to catch. If hot temperatures in the Red Sea are concentrating sharks into narrower depths seasonally, this could potentially indicate increased fisheries vulnerability for sharks associated with climate change.”

A recent KAUST study tagged 10 silky sharks with smart position and temperature tags, as well as pop-up satellite archival tags. The sharks showed regional residency of up to 267 days, mostly within 50 km of tagging sites. The study found that above 29.1°C at the surface, sharks sharply reduced upper-water-column use, spending most time at 70-100 meters — a thermal refuge.

This behavior suggests reduced sightings in hot months reflect depth shifts, not departures — a finding with key conservation implications. Williams said: “Satellite tagging provides extremely valuable data for protecting sharks and better understanding their ecology.” He added: “Understanding the unique ecology Red Sea sharks may help us to better conserve sharks in a warming climate.”

The Red Sea records 31 shark and 29 ray species, over half of which are threatened on the IUCN Red List. Rays, closely tied to the seafloor, benefit from area-based management tools such as MPAs informed by ISRAs.

Cochran noted: “A lot of rays and some deepwater taxa are still under-documented, not because they are unimportant, but because they are harder to study. That is exactly where targeted surveys and new tools can transform what we know.”

The ISRA analysis highlights two priorities: accounting for rays’ ecological breadth and expanding deepwater surveys via ROVs, deep BRUVS, and submersibles to enhance protection. The Red Sea offers a natural laboratory, combining high temperatures, elevated salinity, and strong latitudinal gradients, to study how sharks and rays adapt to extremes.

Protections exist, such as a royal decree banning elasmobranch fishing in Saudi Arabia. Yet prior Reef Ecology Lab work showed enforcement gaps, and shared populations across neighboring countries remain legally fished. More recent market surveys, conducted with the National Center for Wildlife, show declining shark and ray sales, indicating potential behavioral changes in response to stricter enforcement.

Tracking complements ISRAs by providing behavioral evidence of regular presence and habitat use. Red Sea Reef Ecology Lab studies informed ISRA designations for endangered whale sharks, guitarfish, and manta rays.

Cochran said: “The ISRAs show us the overlap between where the sharks regularly occur and where we have the data to show it. Tracking studies can help generate that data while also telling us how animals move through those habitats and when they may be most exposed to threats like fishing.”

Satellite tracking of Red Sea silky sharks revealed new insights into connectivity, including a shark moving from Jeddah into a Sudanese ISRA — the first documented trans-Red Sea movement. Williams said: “Tracking provides valuable data on shark connectivity, enabling ISRAs to be defined more accurately and protected more effectively.”

The Reef Ecology Lab prioritizes sharks and rays due to their ecological roles and vulnerability. Research combining ecology with oceanography, fisheries science, technology, sociology, and spatial planning is most effective.

The silky shark study demonstrates this: understanding the water column’s temperature structure was essential to interpreting movement patterns and assessing fisheries risk. Michael Berumen, KAUST marine science professor, said: “Saudi Arabia is investing heavily in the Red Sea. Our job is to make sure decisions about protection and use are informed by the best possible science, so sustainability is real, not just a slogan.”

Andrew Temple, research scientist, concluded: “Protecting sharks and rays is not anti-development. It is risk management for the ecosystem services that support fisheries, biodiversity, and long-term tourism value.”

 


Red Sea’s oxygen balance under strain, experts warn

Updated 13 February 2026
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Red Sea’s oxygen balance under strain, experts warn

  • Scientists say warming waters, nutrient runoff and coastal development could quietly erode coral resilience

RIYADH: The Red Sea may not have dead zones, but its fragile ecosystem is vulnerable to oxygen depletion — a quiet decline that can undermine coral health and disrupt marine life.

Sea dead zones are hypoxic or low-oxygen pockets that form most often when nutrient pollution — especially nitrogen and phosphorus from farm runoff and wastewater — fuels blooms that ultimately strip oxygen from the water.

Experts say the risk is not inevitable, but it depends on earlier detection and tighter control of the conditions that drain oxygen from coastal waters.

A sea that relies on its own “breathing” is also a sea shaped by geography.

FASTFACT

DID YOU KNOW?

  • The Red Sea is naturally low in oxygen because of its warm waters and high salinity — making it especially vulnerable to further oxygen decline.
  • The Red Sea’s narrow Bab Al-Mandab strait limits deepwater exchange, meaning the basin largely depends on its own internal circulation to ‘replenish’ oxygen.
  • Saudi Arabia’s coastline features steep underwater drop-offs, allowing deep, oxygen-poor water to move closer to coral reefs near shore.

Matheus Paiva, a senior oceanographer, told Arab News that “the Red Sea’s shallow Bab Al-Mandab choke point limits deepwater exchange,” meaning oxygen replenishment depends heavily on internal overturning circulation.

He said this circulation is driven as surface waters flow north, cool, become denser and sink, helping ventilate deeper layers through vertical mixing.

Paiva said the Saudi coastline’s underwater topography makes the risk more immediate close to shore.

Coral reefs along Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea coast, where scientists say warm, salty waters and limited deep-water exchange can leave ecosystems vulnerable to low-oxygen stress. (Unsplash.com)

“Unlike regions with wide, gradual shelves, our coast features narrow fringing reefs that drop sharply into deep water via steep underwater cliffs and canyons,” he said.

“This ‘step-and-drop’ topography brings deep oxygen-poor water close to shore.”

Paiva said warming at the surface can intensify stratification and reduce vertical mixing. He said that can allow low-oxygen water to creep upslope and affect shallower reef zones.

How oxygen gets consumed faster than it’s replaced is where human pressure can tip the balance.

Carlos Duarte, executive director or the Coral Research and Development Accelerator Program at KAUST, told Arab News that the Red Sea’s baseline conditions create vulnerability. “Because of its warm waters and high salinity, the Red Sea is inherently low in oxygen and, therefore, vulnerable to processes that decline oxygen further.”

He said algal blooms and heat waves raise biological oxygen demand, linking low oxygen to coral mortality.

Duarte said human-driven nutrient and organic inputs can intensify these declines.

He said poorly managed urban development and aquaculture operations can contribute nutrient and organic loads that fuel algal blooms.

Coral reefs along Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea coast, where scientists say warm, salty waters and limited deep-water exchange can leave ecosystems vulnerable to low-oxygen stress. (Unsplash.com)

Duarte said that as bloom material decomposes, it strips oxygen from the water and can lead to hypoxia.

The Red Sea’s celebrated clarity reflects a naturally nutrient-poor system. “The risk is amplified because the Red Sea is naturally oligotrophic. It is nutrient-poor and crystal clear,” Paiva said.

He added that wastewater releases and heavy rain events that trigger flash floods can push large nutrient loads into coastal waters in a short time.

In turn, those pulses can threaten biodiversity and the marine environment that underpins tourism investments along the Kingdom’s Red Sea coast.

Seeing low oxygen coming — rather than reacting after the fact — is the promise of new monitoring and analytics.

Paiva said high-accuracy oxygen data still relies on direct measurements collected during vessel surveys.

Carlos Duarte, executive director or the Coral Research and Development Accelerator Program at KAUST.

“We still depend heavily on classic vessel surveys,” he said. Teams deploy multiparameter sondes to profile the water column and collect water samples to establish a baseline.

“This ‘water-truthing’ remains the industry standard for high-accuracy data,” he said.

Saeed Al-Zahrani, general manager for Saudi Arabia at NetApp, said continuous data can help teams intervene earlier. “Oxygen depletion is rarely sudden; it tends to build over time when conditions line up,” he said.

Al-Zahrani said AI can flag anomalies, learn what “normal” looks like in specific locations, and generate short-horizon risk forecasts.

He added that it creates a decision window — guidance on when to increase sampling, where to focus response efforts, and when to tighten controls around discharges.

Coastal development that reduces oxygen risk starts, Duarte said, with what never reaches the sea.

Duarte said Saudi Arabia’s west coast investments have an advantage compared with older coastal destinations: the opportunity to design sustainability into projects from the outset rather than trying to retrofit after degradation becomes evident.

Duarte said nutrient control is a direct lever to reduce oxygen-depletion risk. “Achieve circular economies where organic products and nutrients are recycled and reused in the system to avoid discharging nutrients to the marine environment,” he said.

Al-Zahrani said wastewater and environmental systems produce huge volumes of information, but fragmentation can slow decisions.

He said connecting data in near real time can help detect problems earlier and anticipate load spikes tied to rainfall, tourism peaks, or industrial activity.

Reef resilience depends on reducing stress before heat and low oxygen overlap.

Duarte told Arab News: “Coral reefs are extremely vulnerable to oxygen depletion.” He added that it can contribute to bleaching and mortality in a warmer ocean.

He said marine heat waves can worsen oxygen stress by reducing oxygen solubility and limiting ventilation of subsurface waters, while increasing oxygen demands of organisms.

Duarte said reducing nutrient inputs and managing reefs to avoid excessive growth of seaweed can build resistance.

He also said models that account for how waves and currents interact with reef topography — work he said is being developed at KAUST — can help guide restoration toward sites more likely to remain oxygenated during heat stress.