In last month's article "Don't Sign This Lionfish
Petition," we recommended not signing a petition, sponsored
by the Emerald Coast Reef Association (ECRA), to
let Florida divers kill 100 lionfish each, in exchange for
10 fish tags good for in- or out-of-season spearfishing of
two each of triggerfish, greater amberjack, red snapper,
red grouper and gag grouper, with no limit to the number
of tags that can be earned. Lad Akins of the nonprofit
Reef Environmental Education Foundation was
against the petition for putting more pressure on already
impacted fish species, and we agreed.
ECRA president Candy Hansard wrote to say we
were in error with our numbers: the ECRA's goal was
to remove 25,000 lionfish in two years or less from
the Florida Panhandle, not the 5,000 we wrote.
While the online petition stated that it doesn't
limit the number of fish tags divers could earn,
Hansard says the pilot would only provide a total
of 2,500 tags. "For removing 25,000 lionfish by sacrificing
2,500 of our native fish, we will be saving
approximately 1.6 million of our native fish each
month those 25,000 lionfish are out of our water. We
will also be preventing the release of up to 25 billion
lionfish eggs that will not be reproducing the following
year."
In reply to Akins's suggestion that lionfish roundup
derbies are a better way to eradicate the fish, Hansard writes, "Derbies require a lot of work and
money, so they are only held sporadically. Divers
wait months without harvesting lionfish from reefs
to improve their chances of winning the next derby.
This leaves breeding lionfish in the water for months,
a year, or longer until the next derby is organized
and funded."
Still, the ECRA isn't swaying many divers to its
side. Undercurrent reader Carol Cox (Mexico Beach,
FL) wrote us to say "Hansard campaigned for the
Mexico Beach Artificial Reef Association (MBARA),
and other artificial reef organizations in Florida, to
support this petition at our last artificial reef seminar.
My husband and I are both board members for
MBARA and we did not see the logic in it."
Peter Hughes, who runs the liveaboard operation
DivEncounters out of Miami Beach, says the goal
seems more to spear game fish than to kill lionfish.
"This is just another back-door attempt to circumvent
the essential protections in place as we try to rebuild
(or at least protect and maintain) our grouper and
snapper populations -- especially grouper, which are
becoming scarily scarce, in my unscientific opinion."
Ultimately, the people Hansard and ECRA need
to convince are Florida state regulators, and they
don't look likely to be won over. But for you to see
both sides of the story, read the petition for yourself
- it's at www.gopetition.com/petitions/support-lionfish-population-control-and-the-search-for-eradication-methods.html