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Journal ArticleDOI

Worst case scenario: potential long-term effects of invasive predatory lionfish (Pterois volitans) on Atlantic and Caribbean coral-reef communities

Mark A. Albins, +1 more
- 01 Nov 2013 - 
- Vol. 96, Iss: 10, pp 1151-1157
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TLDR
A possible “worst case scenario” in which the direct and indirect effects of lionfish could combine with the impacts of preexisting stressors—especially overfishing—and cause substantial deleterious changes in coral-reef communities is described.
Abstract
The Pacific red lionfish has recently invaded Western Atlantic and Caribbean coral reefs, and may become one of the most ecologically harmful marine fish introductions to date. Lionfish possess a broad suite of traits that makes them particularly successful invaders and strong negative interactors with native fauna, including defensive venomous spines, cryptic form, color and behavior, habitat generality, high competitive ability, low parasite load, efficient predation, rapid growth, and high reproductive rates. With an eye on the future, we describe a possible "worst case scenario" in which the direct and indirect effects of lionfish could combine with the impacts of preexisting stressors—especially overfishing—and cause sub- stantial deleterious changes in coral-reef communi- ties. We also discuss management actions that could be taken to minimize these potential effects by, first, developing targeted lionfish fisheries and local removals, and second, enhancing native biotic resistance, particularly via marine reserves that could conserve and foster potential natural enemies of this invader. Ultimately, the lionfish invasion will be limited either by the lionfish starving—the worst end to the worst case scenario—or by some combination of native pathogens, parasites, predators, and competitors controlling the abundance of lionfish.

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Status and trends of Caribbean coral reefs : 1970-2012

TL;DR: With only about one-sixth of the original coral cover left, most Caribbean coral reefs may disappear in the next 20 years, primarily due to the loss of grazers in the region, according to the latest report, the status and trends of Caribbean Coral Reefs: 1970-2012 as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Invasive lionfish drive Atlantic coral reef fish declines.

TL;DR: The response of native fish communities to predation by lionfish populations on nine coral reefs off New Providence Island, Bahamas is documented to have long-term negative implications for the structure of Atlantic marine communities, as well as the societies and economies that depend on them.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Ecological Role of Sharks on Coral Reefs

TL;DR: The ecological roles of sharks on coral reefs are explored and it is found that most reef-associated shark species do not act as apex predators but instead function as mesopredators along with a diverse group of reef fish.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predatory fish invaders: Insights from Indo-Pacific lionfish in the western Atlantic and Caribbean

TL;DR: This work takes stock of recently accumulated knowledge about lionfish ecology and behaviour and examines how this information is contributing to general understanding of the patterns and processes underpinning marine predator invasions, and to the specific issue of lionfish management.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A hotspot of non-native marine fishes: evidence for the aquarium trade as an invasion pathway

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a large spatially explicit marine fish database to show that there are a surprising number of non-native fishes on the reefs of southeast Florida, USA.
Journal ArticleDOI

Competition, predation, and density-dependent mortality in demersal marine fishes

TL;DR: Findings indicate that density-dependent mortality in demersal marine fishes is often caused by interplay of predation and competition, whose roles may be altered by variation in habitat complexity and larval supply.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geographic extent and chronology of the invasion of non-native lionfish (Pterois volitans (Linnaeus 1758) and P. miles (Bennett 1828)) in the Western North Atlantic and Caribbean Sea

TL;DR: The Indo-Pacific lionfishes (Pterois volitans and P. miles]: Family Scorpaenidae) are the first non-native marine fishes to establish in the Western North Atlantic; the chronology of the invasion is reported here using records from the US Geological Survey’s Nonindigenous Aquatic Species database.
Journal ArticleDOI

An overview of the relationships between mimicry and crypsis

TL;DR: There are in fact three major criteria dividing six phenomona, rather than a single dichotomy between mimicry and crypsis, and each author's definition includes differing and partially overlapping subsets of the six classes:crypsis; masquerade; Batesism; Mullerism; polymorphism and convergence.

Biology, ecology, control and management of the invasive Indo-Pacific lionfish: An updated integrated assessment

TL;DR: This integrated assessment provides a general overview of the biology and ecology of lionfish including genetics, taxonomy, reproductive biology, early life history and dispersal, venom defense and predation, and feeding ecology.
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