It’s been called “the worst environmental disaster the Atlantic Ocean will ever face.” But unless you’re a marine biologist or fisherman, the lionfish probably isn’t on your radar.
A new website launched earlier this week hopes to change all that. The Invasive Lionfish Web Portal was created by scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to educate the broader public and fellow researchers about the evolving threat this small, spiked, venomous swimmer poses to the southern US coast and the Caribbean. Also, how tasty it is.
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“Be aware you can buy lionfish in restaurants; ask your local seafood house about them,” says James Morris, a marine ecologist with NOAA and one member of the core team behind the Invasive Lionfish portal, which includes live Twitter and Flickr feeds showing people killing and eating lionfish (under the hashtag #lionfish, of course).
How we got to the point that a top US government conservation agency is openly encouraging people to make a cool-looking marine animal into fish sticks and post mid-slaughter selfies is worth reviewing.
Native to the waters around southeast Asia and Australia, lionfish were first spotted in North America off the coast of Florida in 1985. The method by which this non-native species showed up here remains a mystery, but it’s highly likely it was related to the thriving trade in live lionfish to stock aquariums in the US (in other words, someone released them into the water here, accidentally or otherwise).
Since then, the wild lionfish population has swelled to over 1,000 fish per acre in some locations in the Atlantic, decimating populations of local fish and destroying coral reefs. The lionfish eats 56 other species and has found Atlantic waters so hospitable to its tastes, many are obese.
“We believe we can’t control all the lionfish, their habitat is too expansive,” Morris notes. However, a recent study indicates that removing a significant portion of lionfish—between 75 and 95 percent in selected waters—allows native species to recover. Hence the push to make lionfish more appetizing to Americans.
The Invasive Lionfish portal hosts PDF manuals on how to safely harvest lionfish and a mythbusting section dispelling the notion that lionfish can’t or shouldn’t be eaten because of the venom stored in their spines (the meat itself is safe). “There’s a lot of misinformation out there,” Morris adds.
NOAA first attempted an “Eat Lionfish” campaign almost two years ago to entice diners and restaurants, but the Invasive Lionfish website is even broader. It’s a one-stop shop for everyone, scientists and laypeople alike, designed to keep them updated on how the fight against the lionfish is going, according to Morris.
“It’s really a community gathering place around lionfish,” he said. “People love talking and learning and asking about the issue, and nothing shows that more clearly than how much traffic is on Twitter and social media.”