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Invasive Species Lionfish Continues To Terrorize Venezuela

Fisherman William Alvarez cuts off the poisonous spines from a lionfish (Pterois) while cleaning it to prepare ceviche that he sells to tourists on the beach of Chichiviriche de la Costa, Vargas state, Venezuela,. Venezuelan authorities have organized sport fishing competitions to fight the dangerous proliferation of the lionfish, which experts assure threatens the existence of other species due to its high level of predation. AFP PHOTO

CARACAS — The dazzling, colorful lionfish is a must for any exotic aquarium, but it has also become a major threat to the western Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean.

“It’s beautiful, but you have to kill it,” said Mavi Escalona, a Venezuelan nurse and amateur spearfisher.

“It causes a lot of damage and it’s delicious!”

The spectacular, striped lionfish with its venomous spines is a carnivore originally from the Indian and Pacific oceans that has now become an invasive species in the Atlantic and Caribbean, posing a threat to their ecosystems.

Known by many other names such as zebrafish, tastyfish and butterfly-cod, the lionfish can now be found from Florida to northern Brazil.

And it has a voracious appetite: eggs, small fish, crustaceans, mollusks.

It is at least partly responsible — alongside overfishing, pollution and climate change — for a drop in the numbers of other fish in the area.

“It’s an invasive fish. It doesn’t have competitors or predators,” said Laura Gutierrez, a Venezuelan biologist now based in the Canary Islands of Spain but who studied lionfish for many years in her homeland.

The lionfish was first spotted in Florida in 1985.

https://vifreepress.com/2017/06/invasive-lionfish-ridding-caribbean-one-newest-species-fish-just-discovered-ember-goby/
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