No change in key reef fish herbivores or reef fisher yields in Barbados a decade after the lionfish invasion

Abstract Red lionfish, Pterois volitans, a non-native marine species with potential to cause significant damage to Caribbean coral reefs, reached Barbados in late 2011. In 2012, before lionfish became locally established, fish surveys at ten reef sites in Barbados were undertaken every four months o...

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Main Authors: Henri Vallès, Julian Walcott, Hazel A. Oxenford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-02-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-90218-6
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author Henri Vallès
Julian Walcott
Hazel A. Oxenford
author_facet Henri Vallès
Julian Walcott
Hazel A. Oxenford
author_sort Henri Vallès
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Red lionfish, Pterois volitans, a non-native marine species with potential to cause significant damage to Caribbean coral reefs, reached Barbados in late 2011. In 2012, before lionfish became locally established, fish surveys at ten reef sites in Barbados were undertaken every four months over a year to generate baseline data. Fisher catch surveys were also undertaken at two main landing sites twice in a year. A decade later, all surveys were repeated at the same sites. Post-invasion lionfish biomass was low across most sites and increased with site depth, likely due to fishing. A comparison of reef fish biomass of selected key herbivores of high ecological and commercial importance (parrotfishes and surgeonfishes) and forage fish groups (damselfishes and wrasses) pre- and post-invasion indicated no detectable effects of lionfish on the key herbivores and wrasses, although damselfish biomass did decline with lionfish biomass increases. We also found no evidence of a decline in fisher catch rates, suggesting no negative impacts on fisher earnings. Furthermore, catch composition remained virtually unchanged for trap fishers, while lionfish had become an important component of the catch of spearfishers. Overall, our results suggest that control of lionfish through sustained fishing effectively protects key fish herbivores and might indirectly benefit reefs through a release of fishing pressure on native fishes by spearfishers now targeting lionfish.
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spelling doaj-art-0586f642175744bcb5221ad62a8e8a442025-08-20T03:10:52ZengNature PortfolioScientific Reports2045-23222025-02-0115111610.1038/s41598-025-90218-6No change in key reef fish herbivores or reef fisher yields in Barbados a decade after the lionfish invasionHenri Vallès0Julian Walcott1Hazel A. Oxenford2Department of Biological and Chemical Sciences, The University of the West IndiesCentre for Resource Management and Environmental Studies, The University of the West IndiesCentre for Resource Management and Environmental Studies, The University of the West IndiesAbstract Red lionfish, Pterois volitans, a non-native marine species with potential to cause significant damage to Caribbean coral reefs, reached Barbados in late 2011. In 2012, before lionfish became locally established, fish surveys at ten reef sites in Barbados were undertaken every four months over a year to generate baseline data. Fisher catch surveys were also undertaken at two main landing sites twice in a year. A decade later, all surveys were repeated at the same sites. Post-invasion lionfish biomass was low across most sites and increased with site depth, likely due to fishing. A comparison of reef fish biomass of selected key herbivores of high ecological and commercial importance (parrotfishes and surgeonfishes) and forage fish groups (damselfishes and wrasses) pre- and post-invasion indicated no detectable effects of lionfish on the key herbivores and wrasses, although damselfish biomass did decline with lionfish biomass increases. We also found no evidence of a decline in fisher catch rates, suggesting no negative impacts on fisher earnings. Furthermore, catch composition remained virtually unchanged for trap fishers, while lionfish had become an important component of the catch of spearfishers. Overall, our results suggest that control of lionfish through sustained fishing effectively protects key fish herbivores and might indirectly benefit reefs through a release of fishing pressure on native fishes by spearfishers now targeting lionfish.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-90218-6LionfishInvasive non-native speciesCaribbean coral reefsManagementReef fisheries
spellingShingle Henri Vallès
Julian Walcott
Hazel A. Oxenford
No change in key reef fish herbivores or reef fisher yields in Barbados a decade after the lionfish invasion
Scientific Reports
Lionfish
Invasive non-native species
Caribbean coral reefs
Management
Reef fisheries
title No change in key reef fish herbivores or reef fisher yields in Barbados a decade after the lionfish invasion
title_full No change in key reef fish herbivores or reef fisher yields in Barbados a decade after the lionfish invasion
title_fullStr No change in key reef fish herbivores or reef fisher yields in Barbados a decade after the lionfish invasion
title_full_unstemmed No change in key reef fish herbivores or reef fisher yields in Barbados a decade after the lionfish invasion
title_short No change in key reef fish herbivores or reef fisher yields in Barbados a decade after the lionfish invasion
title_sort no change in key reef fish herbivores or reef fisher yields in barbados a decade after the lionfish invasion
topic Lionfish
Invasive non-native species
Caribbean coral reefs
Management
Reef fisheries
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-90218-6
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AT hazelaoxenford nochangeinkeyreeffishherbivoresorreeffisheryieldsinbarbadosadecadeafterthelionfishinvasion