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JohnD

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Here is an intersting story:

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=s ... &ncid=1112

BEAUFORT, N.C. - Divers will explore the ocean bottom off North Carolina next month to learn more about the Indo-Pacific lionfish, a venomous fish that appears to be growing in numbers.



The scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration plan to look into the fish populations Aug. 2-20 off North Carolina. The fish numbers also are increasing in waters off Florida and Bermuda.


The fish population has grown over the past four years around reefs and is the first Pacific marine fish known to populate Atlantic waters. It is an aquarium fish known for bright coloration and apparently was introduced in Atlantic waters by releases from aquariums, according to NOAA statement.


Paula Whitfield of NOAA's Center for Coastal Fisheries and Habitat Research in Beaufort will lead the expedition, which is sponsored by the NOAA Undersea Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington.


Divers will collect lionfish and study their impact on other fish species.


"These beautiful, but unwelcomed, visitors pose potential risks both to people and to their new marine environment," says Whitfield.


She said that people can suffer painful stings from the fish and that other fish species can be paralyzed when stung by lionfish. Most lionfish have been found in waters more than 100 feet deep.


Lionfish have few predators and feed on small shrimp and large fish, including the young of important commercial fish species such as snapper and grouper, Whitfield said.
 

Len

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Ya, John Brandt has recently posted a bunch of articles stating alarming things (like Lionfish) are turning up all over US shores. Very sad :(
 
A

Anonymous

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Weren't these found as far north as NJ? I remember reading that ( I believe) they were as far as Sandy Hook, NJ. I could be mistaken.

Has anyone here ever been stung by one while keeping them in their reef?
~wings~
 
A

Anonymous

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SeaScope is also running an article by Dr. Robert J. Goldstein (Vol. 21 Issue 2 2004). As it states in the paper, the lions have made it to NY. Sandy HooK isn't that far down from there. -Jen
 

John_Brandt

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Lionfish distribution as of Summer 2003

lion_dist.jpg
 

flounderer

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Check out this link

http://www.uncw.edu/nurc/research/spotlight_on.htm

I work on a dive boat on weekends and unfortunatly we are seeing these guys with increasing frequency on our offshore dives. Local divers are telling others to kill them on site because there possible impact on local fisheries, while others are saying to collect them live or dead for DNA analysis. One of my friends even caught one for our research centers aquarium.
 

Johnsteph10

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A good friend of mine was the first to actually document a lionfish off the coast of FL about 12 years ago...

speargunned it (about 12" -- very fat and healthy)

john
 

Mouse

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Triggers too from what ive heard, weve even had Triggers show up round Blighty. Saying that in the London Aquarium they have a Hinochius Dephretes (long fin banner fish) thats in the Atlantic tank and doing fine, apparently thay cant catch it, and they say if they did that he might die on reaclimatisation, its a real stocky little guy too, must have packed it on to deal with the cold.
 

brandon4291

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You know in some ways, I don't view human cause of this unlikely distribution as a disastrous event--more like part of the random chance that keeps DNA evolving as luck and mutation provide. I believe that human action is a much quicker form of the earthen raft, continental rift separation or whatever else in nature sent an animal from one locale to another. It is changing the current ecological makeup with chance introduction, as life always does. We have grown to study the current reef ecology and naturally fear change in it, it's not 'bad' in my conceptual world... just inevitable.

There is no doubt that lionfish distribution could affect the longevity and distribution of reef individuals we have come to admire. There is no doubt that predator/prey linkages are changing considering the reproduction of the lionfish in Atlantic waters, and there is no doubt we could have prevented the current introduction with careful choice. I do care about our reef ecology and preserving it while we can to learn from it, but when all is said and done it is still just natural selection driven by genetic changes (mutations) in a tiny DNA strand--pure science without emotion.

If it can make it and multiply, alls fair in love and nucleotide bases I always say.
 

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