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Lionfish herd smaller fish into pockets of coral reef or up against barriers and then swallow the prey in a single strike. In their native range, lionfish eat young damselfish, cardinal fish and shrimp, among others. In the Western Atlantic, samples of lionfish stomach contents show that they consume more than 50 different species, including shrimp and juvenile grouper and parrotfish, species that humans also enjoy. A lionfish's stomach can expand up to 30 times its normal size after a meal. Their appetite is what makes lionfish such frightening invaders.
Little is known about what keeps lionfish in check in their home waters. In the Atlantic, adult lionfish have no known predators. Lab studies have shown that many native fish would rather starve than attack a lionfish.
Whitfield, the fisheries biologist at NOAA, began to study the troublesome new invader in 2004. She looked for lionfish in 22 survey sites from Florida to North Carolina. She expected to find lionfish in a few of the sites; instead, she found them in 18. She found lionfish in near-shore waters, coral reefs and deep ocean. At some sites lionfish outnumbered native fish. She estimated in 2006 that there were almost 7 lionfish living in each acre of the western Atlantic. More recent studies suggest that number has grown by 400 percent.
Lionfish are even more common in the warm waters around the Bahamas, where some scientists report finding as many as 160 fish per acre. There are so many lionfish, and in such a variety of habitats, that it might not be possible to completely eradicate the species in this part of the Caribbean. Millions of tourists visit the Caribbean islands each year, many drawn by the chance to snorkel or scuba-dive. The sea is home to more than 1200 species of fish, many of which don't exist anywhere else. "The lionfish could have a devastating effect on business," says Peter Hughes, whose company leads nearly 1000 tourists on guided dive tours in the Caribbean every year.
The local economy depends not just on tourist dollars, but on valuable food fish like grouper, shrimp and lobster. A study released by Oregon State University last year found that in just five weeks, invasive lionfish could reduce the number of young native fish on a reef by almost 80 percent.
On January 6, Lad Akins got the call he had hoped would never come.
For the past several months, Akins has used his position as director of special projects for the Reef Environmental Education Foundation (REEF), a consortium of recreational scuba divers, to fight back against lionfish. He knows how to handle and kill a venomous lionfish, and he's been working with REEF to organize teams of divers who can do the same.
In June 2008, REEF sponsored a two-day lionfish workshop with the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, the United States Geological Survey and NOAA. Local government, state park officials and anyone else who might have a say in southeast Florida's marine management put together a system known as "early detection, rapid response." If volunteers reported a lionfish sighting, officials would immediately notify each other and dispatch a specially trained crew to dispose of the fish.


Comments
The information on Lionfish was extremely fascinating and educational. Would there be volunteer programs to assist in the capture or extermination of the fish in the North Carolina area?
Posted by John W. Price on May 20,2009 | 06:53PM
There is a very informative web site concerning the lionfish problems and solutions including videos on how to catch and eat them. Check it out lionfishhunter.com
Posted by Joe Wieneke on May 21,2009 | 04:11PM
Another way you can reduce lionfish numbers is to catch them in the wild and sell them to aquarists or aquarium lovers. Not only do you solve your local problem, but Americans also help reduce the international demand for lionfish species in the aquarium trade from tropical countries like the Philippines.
Posted by Nadia Abesamis on May 21,2009 | 06:59PM
I caught a one and a half inch lionfish under a dock in Strathmere near Corsons Inlet in Cape May County, New Jersey on October 16th, 2006. He is still alive and lives in a 55 gallon tank and is about a foot long. About 99% of his diet has been grass shrimp ever since he was a baby. It is the only lionfish I ever caught & I've been catching tropical fish in the Corsons Inlet area since 1960.
Posted by Bob Seabrook on August 21,2009 | 01:24PM
I want to second the mention of lionfishhunter.com . Maurice is an expert on all things lionfish and is building a much more sensible and cost-effective solution to the lionfish invasion. Despite the millions being spent to train and employ self-justifying government "professionals", the fish are really quite dumb, non-aggressive, and delicious. In his words, "They just sit there, so learn not to stick yourself and you'll be alright."
Posted by Billy Stanley on October 23,2009 | 12:33PM
do you have any pics of lionfish eggs?
Posted by on October 26,2009 | 05:34PM