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James Norris, an ecologist working for NOAA in North Carolina, wants to reduce lionfish populations in areas where the species has already established itself. He has been studying small populations of lionfish for the past two years at NOAA test sites off the coast of North Carolina, near where divers first spotted lionfish hanging off the wreck of the old tanker nine years ago.
He uses Chevron traps, 5-foot by 5.5-foot wire cages shaped like arrowheads, at 20 test stations. "I came up with the idea because we got reports that lionfish were going into lobster traps in Bermuda and in the Bahamas," Norris says. The traps captured at least three or four lionfish each, sometimes capturing significantly more lionfish than any other species. Norris says he has to do more research into the issue of "bycatch," the unintended trapping of other species, before divers can start using the Chevron traps in the fight against invasive lionfish.
"When I started I didn't have any idea that lionfish would even go in a trap, so just identifying trapping is a huge accomplishment," Norris says. It will be another two years before Norris refines his trapping technique, but if he does, the traps could be used to capture large numbers of lionfish in areas where scuba divers and spear-fishers don't normally go.
Fishermen in the Bahamas have come up with their own approach to combating lionfish, one that pits man against fish.
In April 2008, nearly 200 people came to the headquarters of the Bahamas National Trust, the organization responsible for managing the country's parks and wildlife sanctuaries, to watch Alexander Maillis cook a lionfish on live local morning television. With his bare hands, Maillis extracted a lionfish from a pile at his side and demonstrated how to slice off the poisonous spines. Local fishermen came up and touched the fish. Later, everyone at the program tasted a slice of pan-fried lionfish.
Maillis works as a lawyer but comes from a family of commercial fishermen. The Maillis family traces its origin to Greece, and this heritage is what first gave Alexander the idea to serve lionfish in the Bahamas.
"Greeks in the Mediterranean have been eating lionfish for years with no ill effects," Maillis says. Lionfish are not native to the Mediterranean, either. Members of Pterois miles, the less common species in the Atlantic invasion, invaded the Mediterranean sometime in the 1980s via the Suez Canal. "And it's a highly prized panfish in the Pacific Rim." Together with a cousin who is also a fisherman, Maillis taught himself how to handle and cook a lionfish. He learned that if he sliced off the venomous dorsal and anal fins, or if he cooked the fish at high temperatures, the lionfish became harmless. Lionfish flesh isn't poisonous, and heat neutralizes the spines' toxins.
Maillis says that his friends were doubtful about his new dish until he cut open a lionfish stomach and showed them the nine baby parrotfish and three small shrimp inside it. Seeing such a vast number of young prey inside a single fish illustrated what a voracious predator the lionfish could be. Now Maillis' friends are on board. One of them got so swept up that when he later spotted a lionfish in the water off the beach, he rigged a spear from an umbrella and a knife, stabbed the lionfish, and cooked the fish for his family.


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