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The Invasice Venomous Lionfish is Killing Atlantic Reefs. So Please Eat It.

October 24, 2018 โ€” KEY LARGO, Fla. โ€” What do you do with an invasive fish, covered from head to fin with venomous spines as sharp as hypodermic needles; a fish that canโ€™t be caught with a rod or in a trawling net as it multiplies rapidly, deep in our oceans, flummoxing fishermen and scientists alike?

Conservationists are hoping you eat it.

The Indo-Pacific native lionfish arrived in the Atlantic about a decade ago, the product of well-meaning aquarium owners who released their charges into the ocean, not realizing they reproduce at an alarming rate, prey on more than 70 species of fish and hasten the dying-off of any coral reef they alight on. Scientists describe their invasion into Floridaโ€™s waters in the same words noted Key West fisherman Ernest Hemingway used to describe the onset of bankruptcy: slowly, and then all at once. Now estimated to number as many as 1,000 fish per acre, lionfish also have no known predators โ€” except humans.

Read the full story at Vice News

 

VIMS professor inducted into Fishing Hall of Fame

October 24th, 2016 โ€” A Virginia Institute of Marine Science professor just joined Zane Grey, Ernest Hemingway and Izaak Walton as an inductee in the Fishing Hall of Fame of the International Game Fish Association.

John Graves is chancellor professor and chairman of fisheries science at VIMS in Gloucester Point. His induction this month is based largely on his billfish research, which has been โ€œinstrumental in the ongoing efforts to conserve game fish populations worldwide,โ€ IGFA president Rob Kramer said in a statement.

โ€œAnglers today owe him a great deal of gratitude,โ€ Kramer said.

Billfish are large predatory fish notable for their prominent bills. Gravesโ€™ research led to the use of circle hooks for billfish, which VIMS says sharply increased the survival rate of marlin, swordfish and sailfish in the catch-and-release fishery.

His genetic research also enabled federal fisheries officials to distinguish between legally fished Pacific blue marlin and illegally fished Atlantic blue marlin.

Graves called his selection a โ€œtribute to all fisheries scientists and fisheries managers.โ€

Read the full story at the Daily Press 

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