Sharks are iconic marine predators, but most species are highly vulnerable to overfishing. Exploitation of these predators, both as bycatch and as direct targets for their meat and fins, has increased substantially globally over the past half century.
For two decades, Julia has conducted research examining the status of sharks, working to inform improved conservation of these species. Her research, published in Science, provided the first demonstration of regional scale declines in apex predatory sharks (Baum et al. 2003). Subsequent analyses of scientific expeditions from the 1950s revealed the near extirpation of the oceanic whitetip shark from the Gulf of Mexico (Baum & Myers 2004), while analyses of fisheries observer data and research surveys showed declines of many species in the Northwest Atlantic (Myers, Baum et al. 2007; Baum & Blanchard 2010). Julia’s work has also advanced understanding of top-down control in the ocean (Myers, Baum et al. 2007, Baum & Worm 2009). In collaboration with scientists at NOAA, she then turned to Pacific reef sharks showing that the 'human signal' is now the primary determinant of grey, whitetip and other reef shark abundances in the Pacific Ocean, overwhelming the influence of oceanographic productivity and temperature (Nadon et al. 2012). More recently, Julia has worked with students on eastern Pacific sharks and rays at Cocos Island, Costa Rica. This work showed declines of many species, suggesting suggest that this UNESCO heritage site and marine protected area (MPA) is not effectively protected (White et al. 2015), and that many species are sensitive to temperature changes associated with El Niño events (Osgood et al. 2021).