Two women diving beneath Blue Heron Bridge near Palm Beach, FL, during their Thanksgiving vacation
spotted a bright yellow fish about four inches long they had never seen before. Some divers might have just
admired it, snapped photos and kept swimming, but Deb Devers and Lureen Ferretti reported it to the Reef
Environmental Education Foundation (REEF), a Key Largo-based nonprofit organization that serves as a regional
clearinghouse for control of exotic marine fish species.
Lad Akins, REEF's director of special projects, said their instincts were right on. The fish was a mimic lemon
peel surgeonfish, also known as a chocolate surgeonfish, native to the Indo-Pacific and the first of its kind documented
in Florida waters. Devers kept track of the fish, and in December, she and Akins captured it alive using
hand nets. It was shipped to the Ripley's Aquarium of Canada to be displayed as an educational tool on the hazards
of invasive species.
Akins said the removal might have averted an ecological disaster similar to the spread of lionfish, another
Indo-Pacific invader first sighted off Florida's Dania Beach in 1985 and believed to be an abandoned aquarium
pet, now well-established in the Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean. "We don't know what the effects
would have been if the fish had become established and began reproducing," Akins said. "But if we wait to find
out, then it's too late."
He says taking out the surgeonfish was the third successful preemptive strike against a non-native marine
fish species in Florida coastal waters. In 1999 and 2002, REEF staff and volunteers captured four large Indo-
Pacific batfish from Molasses Reef in Key Largo. In 2009, they removed a whitetail dascyllus damselfish from the
east side of the Blue Heron Bridge. In 2012, two Miami divers speared an exotic humpback grouper on a reef off
Biscayne National Park and turned the carcass over to REEF. Akins said none of those three species are known
to have reappeared in Florida waters since their removals.
"Some people might say, 'Oh big deal, we took this little fish out of the water.' But that's the way the lionfish
got started. If only we could have taken the initial few lionfish out of the water in the first place. We're relying
on divers, snorkelers and fishermen to be our eyes and ears. It's a perfect example of how early detection and
rapid removal can be successful in stemming an invasion." Anyone who spots a strange-looking fish that they
suspect is invasive is advised to take a photo and report the sighting at www.reef.org
-- Sue Cocking, Miami Herald