Hey guys, just a few questions here. My are lionfish so hated around the world? We were in the Virgin Islands last summer and we saw several people advertising lion fish killing. I've done some research that says they are destroying our reefs and becoming too invasive. Just curious to hear other thoughts on this. Thanks
tjw - Lionfish are not "hated around the world" as you state. Lionfish in their natural habitat, and with responsible aquarists are not an issue at all and pose no threat to their indigenous fisheries.
Interestingly I have first hand experience at the explosive growth of lionfish as an invasive species in Florida. A few years ago (early 1990s) when I was certified as a diver in South Florida nobody mentioned lionfish. Few people even knew there was a threat at the time. Having kept them in aquariums, I knew them well and
never saw them in Florida waters. Beginning a few years ago people were talking about them, if you saw one you were encouraged to report the sighting. As of 3 or 4 years ago, it became impossible to go on a dive and not see at least one, if not schools of them under ledges, and in nooks and crannies everywhere along the reef, on wrecks, and even clustered on sandy bottoms nears the reefs. Now its odd not to see them.
Lionfish infestation in the Caribbean is a full blown catastrophe for the local fisheries! There, there is good reason to destroy as many as possible as they have no natural predators and are literally eating machines focused on the local fish populations. I've seen big lions in public aquariums, large and fat from years of living the easy life unpredated. In the wild off Florida I've seen even larger fish looking lean and healthy often in groups of 8 ,10, a dozen or more.
They live in depths from knee deep to at least a thousand or more feet, so in my opinion, there is little that can be done to control their spread and the havoc they cause. You state you've researched the subject and have found "they are destroying our reefs and becoming too invasive". That statement alone should answer the question you posed, although I would argue there is no such thing as "
too invasive", if they're invasive, they shouldn't be there at all! In the Atlantic, and Caribbean, the hatred for the species is well deserved.