I wasn't planning on doing another post this week, but when there's a ghost fish in the news, I reckon that's worthy of some brief investigating. It also ties in with my ocean ecosystem post earlier in the week (avoiding terrestrial bias ftw). Now, let's get ghost busting!
You may be wondering, ''ghost fish?', that sounds like a really awful villain from a Scooby Doo cartoon (it wasn't the ghost fish, it was the sheriff, as always), has The Inspector gone mad?' But no I'm serious. Well kind of...
The fish I'm actually talking about is The Venomous Red Lionfish. It is dubbed 'the ghost fish of the coral reefs' as it can turn invisible to its prey.
A venomous red lionfish. |
The species is thought to have been introduced by humans into Floridian waters, but is now present in the Amazon, The Bahamas, The Caribbean and North Carolina's coastline, so its impact could potentially become much greater.
See full article here: http://www.jobsnhire.com/articles/6298/20131021/lionfish-invasion-threatening-atlantic-ocean-ecosystem.htm
Over and out
The Invader Inspector
EDIT: Just came across this , number 10 covers some Lionfish impacts in the Caribbean.
Lionfish are absolutely amazing, but it's a shame they're placing so much pressure on the natives. I'm amused about what they suggested tackle the problem; I wonder what lionfish tastes like?
ReplyDeleteUnrelated, but as you're blogging about invasive species, I thought this (http://www.ucl.ac.uk/cber/events/FranckCourchamp) might interest you.
Yeah it's a slightly unusual management strategy! Must taste ok and seems to have health benefits too though so why not!!!
DeleteAnd thanks, the seminar looks really interesting and relevant to the topics I'm covering, will try and check it out!