Displaying 1 to 14 of 14

  • 2024 Winter Lionfish Throw Down

    https://lionfishzk.com/derbies/winter-lionfish-throw-down/2024-2/

    ZooKeeper.

    The 2024 Winter Lionfish Throw Down (October 14 - December 31, 2024) is a Lionfish hunting tournament held throughout the State of Florida waters. Our goal is to encourage the culling of Lionfish through the winter months to mitigate the damage done by Lionfish all year long. After the FWC’s Summer Challenge the focus on culling Lionfish declines and our goal is to keep up the hunting momentum throughout the whole year.  The Throw Down will mirror many of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission's Lionfish Challenge rules and is being done with their full support. 

  • Compete in the 2020 Florida Lionfish Challenge

    https://myfwc.com/news/all-news/lionfish-620/

    Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

    The annual Lionfish Challenge is an incentive program that rewards harvesters for their lionfish removals. With a tiered system, everybody can be a winner. The participant who harvests the most lionfish will be crowned the Lionfish King/Queen. The Challenge is open now and will run through November 1. You can register for the 2020 Lionfish Challenge and find more information at FWCReefRangers.com/Lionfish-Challenge. Questions regarding the challenge can be sent to Lionfish@MyFWC.com.

  • Impact Assessments and Management Strategies for Invasive Lionfish in the Atlantic

    https://coastalscience.noaa.gov/project/management-strategies-lionfish-atlantic/

    DOC. NOAA. National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science.

    We are conducting biological and ecological assessments of invasive lionfish to determine their impact on reef habitats and economies of the Atlantic. Our work includes interpreting the results of existing biological and ecological studies, identifying data gaps, mapping the distribution of lionfish, and assisting with development of management plans. It is the first study targeting the invasion of Indo-Pacific lionfish along the U.S. Atlantic coast. This project began in November 2012 and is ongoing.

  • Invasive Lionfish Web Portal

    http://lionfish.gcfi.org/

    Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute.

    The Invasive Lionfish Web Portal, developed by the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute in partnership with NOAA, supports the management and control of lionfish in conservation areas along the Southeast coast of the U.S. and Caribbean.

  • Lionfish Challenge

    https://myfwc.com/fishing/saltwater/recreational/lionfish/challenge/

    Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

    The Lionfish Challenge is a free summer-long (May 24-September 2, 2024) lionfish tournament open to recreational and commercial competitors of all ages around the state of Florida. Our goal remains the same — remove as many lionfish as we can in just four months. Are you up for the Challenge? See also:

  • Lionfish Invitational

    https://flowergarden.noaa.gov/involved/lionfishinvitational.html

    DOC. NOAA. Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary.

    NOAA's Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary (FGBNMS) is partnering with Lionfish Invitational, and others to use trained divers to help conduct research and remove invasive lionfish within FGBMNS. This multi-day event is a science-based research expedition in which 11 dive teams work to remove as many lionfish as possible, while also recording helpful data on lionfish activity and sightings. In addition, a science team of 8 divers conducts surveys to determine what species, quantities and sizes of fish are present at each designated site before and after the removals. Applications are due Mar 1, 2024. The 2024 expeditions will take place on the following dates:

    • ​June 23-27, 2024
    • August 11-15, 2024
    • September 8-12, 2024
  • Lionfish Patrol

    https://lionfishpatrol.com/lionfish-app/

    Lionfish Patrol, Inc.

    App is for divers, science, and businesses. Divers can track actual and averages.

  • Mark Your Calendars: 2021 Lionfish Festival May 15-16 in Destin, FL; Vendors and Divers Wanted

    https://myfwc.com/news/all-news/lionfish-fest-121/

    Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

    The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) is excited to announce the 7th annual Lionfish Removal and Awareness Festival May 15 and 16 at AJ’s Seafood and Oyster Bar and HarborWalk Village in Destin. Come out and celebrate the fight against invasive lionfish with the FWC and Destin–Fort Walton Beach. Activities will include fillet demonstrations; family-friendly games and activities; art, diving and conservation booths; and the world’s largest lionfish spearfishing tournament, the Emerald Coast Open. Learn more by visiting FWCReefRangers.com. The 2021 Lionfish Challenge removal incentive program will begin May 21 and continue through Labor Day, Sept. 6. More details on how to get rewarded for your harvest coming soon to FWCReefRangers.com.

  • ReLionMed

    https://relionmed.eu/

    University of Cyprus; Cyprus Department of Fisheries and Marine Research; University of Plymouth (United Kingdom); Enalia Physis Environmental Research Centre (Cyprus); Marine and Environmental Research Lab Ltd (Cyprus).

    Preventing a LIONfish invasion in the MEDiterranean through early response and targeted REmoval.

  • Results of the 2022 Lionfish Challenge: A record-breaking year!

    Sep 16, 2022
    https://myfwc.com/news/all-news/lionfish-results-922/

    Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.

    The Lionfish Challenge 2022, the seventh annual, is a summer-long tournament that rewards divers for their lionfish harvests. The tournament boasted a total of 707 registered participants, the most in the program’s history. 196 divers conducted a total of 676 trips throughout the state during the 3-month tournament and brought in a whopping 25,299 lionfish.

  • Scientists Develop a Plan to Manage Lionfish Populations in the Mediterranean

    Apr 11, 2022
    https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/news/scientists-develop-a-plan-to-manage-lionfish-po…

    University of Plymouth (United Kingdom).

    Scientists have published a series of recommendations to enable communities and managers to minimise the impact of lionfish in the Mediterranean Sea. The invasive species was first noticed off the coast of the Lebanon in 2012, with sightings since recorded as far west as Sicily, and north into the Adriatic Sea off Croatia. More entered in 2015 due to the enlargement and deepening of the Suez Canal, with their spread unimpeded due to a lack of common predators. Researchers in the UK and Cyprus have said increasing lionfish densities – combined with the species' generalist diet and consumption of ecologically and socio-economically important fish – has the potential to result in further disruption of an already stressed marine environment. They have now published a Guide to Lionfish Management in the Mediterranean [PDF, 8.0 MB], which features a series of recommendations through which they hope lionfish populations can be managed.

  • Study Confirms Invasive Lionfish Now Threaten Species Along Brazilian Coast

    Jun 3, 2021
    https://www.calacademy.org/press/releases/study-confirms-invasive-lionfish-now-…

    California Academy of Sciences.

    Since arriving to the northern Atlantic Ocean less than 30 years ago, lionfish have quickly become one of the most widespread and voracious invasive species, negatively impacting marine ecosystems—particularly coral reefs—from the northeast coast of the United States to the Caribbean Islands. In a new study, an international research team including the California Academy of Sciences presents four new records of lionfish off the coast of Brazil, confirming the invasion of the predatory fish into the South Atlantic for the first time.