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Lionfish are tasty treat for undersea creatures
By: Norma Connolly | norma@cfp.ky
4 August 2010
 
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 In the video above Little Cayman Reef Divers' Sunny Moore feeds Mini Me. Video courtesy of Craig Rowland.

  

 Little Cayman’s Reef Divers dive instructor Dottie Benjamin must be one of groupers Mini Me’s and Benji’s favourite people. She regularly fills their bellies with tasty lionfish.

Ms Benjamin is among the growing number of divers in Little Cayman who are feeding dead and live lionfish caught in handheld nets to groupers and other hungry critters, like lobsters and eels that hang out on the island’s Bloody Bay Wall.

“Mini Me has eaten as many as five on one dive,” she said. “He has learned to recognise them, so he follows us and we point out on the wall where the lionfish are and he goes after them himself.”

The friendly grouper has also learned to recognise the nets and bags that divers certified to catch and cull lionfish carry and immediately associates them with feeding time.

Mini Me, the larger and pushier of the two groupers who are practically pets to divers who regularly explore Bloody Bay Wall, gets the lion’s share of the lionfish treats. Benji has only started eating dead ones in recent months.

“As far as I know, Mini Me is the only one who has eaten live lionfish,” Ms. Benjamin said.

She has also fed dead lionfish to octopi, lobsters and eels. “Lobsters love them. They come out of their hole, grab the fish and stuff it into their mouth like an ice-cream cone,” she said.

In the last year, Mini Mi has eaten more than 100 lionfish, Ms Benjamin estimated.

He has become adept at quickly grabbing and eating live lionfish that divers release from their bags, and then for good measure, sticks his head into the empty bag to makes sure there’s nothing else to eat in there. “You have to show him that the bag is empty, otherwise he’ll put his whole head in the bag to see if there’s any other snack there,” Ms Benjamin said.

Divers hope that by getting the local marine wildlife to associate lionfish with food, they will become natural predators of the invasive species which is breeding alarmingly fast in local waters.

“Last year, I caught 40 lionfish, so far this year, I’ve caught 127,” she said.

“If we could only get groupers to recognise lionfish as prey,” Ms Benjamin said. “Hopefully, the other groupers will learn to do that.”

So far, the only defence against the spread of lionfish on Cayman’s reefs have been divers.

 
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South Sound Warrior
Lionfish are tasty treat for undersea creatures
Posted by South Sound Warrior on 8/4/2010 9:19:52 AM

I doubt it EB, we will have to start using lionfish as bait tho ;)
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4Cayman
Lionfish are tasty treat for undersea creatures
Posted by 4Cayman on 8/3/2010 3:32:00 PM

This is great news that groupers are learning that lionfish are a food source. Perhaps local fishermen will see that grouper are far more beneficial alive than dead.
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