2017
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3270
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Invasive lionfish had no measurable effect on prey fish community structure across the Belizean Barrier Reef

Abstract: Invasive lionfish are assumed to significantly affect Caribbean reef fish communities. However, evidence of lionfish effects on native reef fishes is based on uncontrolled observational studies or small-scale, unrepresentative experiments, with findings ranging from no effect to large effects on prey density and richness. Moreover, whether lionfish affect populations and communities of native reef fishes at larger, management-relevant scales is unknown. The purpose of this study was to assess the effects of li… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…Higher movement rates for larger individuals is reasonable to expect given they are more physically capable to make such movements and face lower risk of predation in transit [78,79]. Predation on lionfish from native species is likely minimal [18,19,80], but juveniles risk conspecific predation [59,81] particularly in areas of high lionfish density [60] where this study was conducted. Smaller lionfish may thus occupy smaller foraging arenas near the reef [82].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Higher movement rates for larger individuals is reasonable to expect given they are more physically capable to make such movements and face lower risk of predation in transit [78,79]. Predation on lionfish from native species is likely minimal [18,19,80], but juveniles risk conspecific predation [59,81] particularly in areas of high lionfish density [60] where this study was conducted. Smaller lionfish may thus occupy smaller foraging arenas near the reef [82].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Esto se traduce en la afectación de la red trófica del arrecife (Arias-González et al 2011), como consecuencia de su apetito voraz y consumo generalista de peces e invertebrados de importancia ecológica y comercial (Arredondo-Chávez et al 2016). Ante estos potenciales impactos, se ha priorizado la estimación de las abundancias del pez león a través de la implementación de diferentes metodologías tales como la aplicación de Rotenona (Kulbicki et al 2012), video-transectos (Andradi-Brown et al 2017a, Bacheler et al 2017, calcular la Captura Por Unidad de Esfuerzo (CPUE) (Frazer et al 2012), marcaje y recaptura (Akins et al 2014), método de distancia (Tilley et al 2016) y censos visuales; siendo estos últimos los más utilizados (Darling et al 2011, Cure et al 2014, Hackerott et al 2017, Peiffer et al 2017.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…No obstante, se ha documentado que la aplicación de este método puede subestimar la abundancia real dado que no considera la naturaleza críptica de la especie, además de las condiciones físicas del arrecife (Kulbicki et al 2012. Por tal motivo, actualmente se utilizan censos dirigidos hacia la búsqueda específica del pez león con la finalidad de obtener resultados más precisos (Anderson et al 2017, Hackerott et al 2017, Sabido-Itzá & García-Rivas 2019.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…It was first noticed in 1985 off the Atlantic coast of Florida, and has gradually expanded into the Caribbean and along the western Atlantic coasts (Bors et al, 2019). Although the species is a voracious feeder on a large variety of smaller reef fish, recent reports question earlier suggestions that this invasion would severely diminish reef fish diversity in the Caribbean (Hackerott et al, 2017). The potential threat of the ecological effects of the expansion of lionfish has spurred numerous round-up derbies by local scuba diver communities, with mixed results (Usseglio et al, 2017).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%