While diving in St. Kitts, Carol Ziller (Littleton CO) noticed that Dive St. Kitts divemasters were pulling flamingo
tongues from sea fans, and either broke them up or buried them in the sand. They claimed there was a proliferation due to
the last hurricane, and that the little animals are killing the gorgonia. Ziller told us she saw as many as 20 on a single sea fan
and wondered if this was a kosher practice.
We asked Paul Humann, author of the superlative Fish, Critter and Coral ID book series, who told us, “I’ve heard of
this. Under normal circumstances, flamingo tongues do not seriously injure sea fans and other gorgonians upon which they
feed. The living tissue they feed on is quickly replaced by the colony, and no permanent damage is done. The number of flamingo
tongues on any colony is normally held in check by unknown mechanisms. In fact, in many parts of the Bahamas and
Caribbean, flamingo tongues are endangered because of over-collection by unknowing divers who don’t realize the beautiful
pattern is not part of the shell but is instead the mantle, which will disappear when the animal dies after being removed from
the water.
“In the St. Kitts case, perhaps the stress caused by the hurricane has temporarily disabled the unknown mechanism that,
under normal circumstances, prevents flamingo tongue population explosions. This is part of natural processes, and will correct
itself over time and return to normal. It does not appear to be a man-made problem. Should man interfere with nature
and try to do something about it? This is a philosophical question that we could argue about endlessly. It would be my suggestion
that the diving community check with local marine biologists, government or educational agencies, and follow their
advice. Otherwise, it may be another ill-conceived attempt by the ultimate predator – man -- to alter nature.”
So we contacted Dive St. Kitts to see what was behind its policy. Michael Arsenault, dive operations manager at Dive St.
Kitts, told us, “This is the first I have heard of this practice. It is not a policy of Dive St. Kitts or a recommendation from our
governing bodies. If these actions are taking place, management does not endorse such actions. I will be following up with
our professionals and advise them of non-interference.
Then we heard from another staffer, Jeremy Reeves, who said, “I was told by the natives that the flamingo tongue is an
alien species . . . but I feel I do not have the expertise to answer this, as I have not been on St. Kitts long enough to truly know
for sure. Because you are the expert magazine, I ask that you please do more investigation on this matter and let me know
what you find out. With your guidance, perhaps I can help educate the natives on what really is going on under the water.”
We e-emailed Reeves with specific information about flamingo tongues and suggested he check Humann’s Critter ID
books. After all, flamingo tongues have been in St Kitts’ waters far longer than humans have lived there. He wrote back,
“Thanks so much for your help. Neither the resort, myself, nor the dive shop believe in removing things from the ocean, and
we have put a stop to it.”