A marine wildlife expert from Bonaire visiting the
Cayman Islands on September 4 told local environmentalists
that the efforts made on that Dutch island to cull
lionfish were beginning to work and populations are
falling. Fernando Simal said that concerted and coordinated
efforts across the island to enlist the help of visiting
and local divers, the introduction of lionfish hunts
and changes to local laws allowing the use of spearguns
to cull the invasive species have all paid off.
Simal revealed the results of a comparative study
with the neighboring island of Curacao, where cull
efforts had been slower to start and were significantly
less than the commitment made in Bonaire. His findings
showed that the lionfish in Bonaire were smaller, weighed less and, above all, had less density. The lionfish
population was almost half that of Curacao's, and
the size of the fish was 33 percent smaller, a positive
because smaller fish eat and compete less with indigenous
species. Simal said lionfish is promoted in Bonaire
as a tasty dish and now fetches around $14 per kilo
which, coupled with the licensing of spearguns for divers
hunting the fish, has meant that the cull works.
The Caymans' Department of Environment marine
team said that they were also starting to see some
positive effects from the culling efforts. Numbers in
areas which are dived regularly are falling, but local
experts raised concerns that lionfish are still dense
100 meters outside the mooring areas, and that more
efforts are needed to keep up the pressure on the
lionfish population.
- - Cayman News Service