Dragonfly said:Guy's I seriously doubt wether the lion fish will have any effect on the fish population at all. Lion fish are in abundance on our coastline and can be cught in rockpools on most beaches. The chances of getting stung by one are also less likely. Most Crayfisherman use gloves when diving anyway.
the problem is that it is a non-native species to those waters, and will potentially outcompete other native predators, damaging their populations and affecting the food chain. You don't have to look far to find many examples of this around the world. Feral pigs in Australia, Russian thistles across the midwest of the United States, ect.
In my own state, we have a good example of exactly that, and it is also a fish...the walleye. Walleye are not native to this state, but appeared here in the early sixties, most theories point to a "bucket biologist", or somebody who transplanted a small number of them from out of state into the upper Platte drainage. They are very successful predators and have in the last 40 years managed to spread statewide, and have greatly reduced or even eliminated trout populations in many bodies of water. Not only do they compete for available food, but they also prey on juvenile trout, so the damage to the trout populations is two-fold. There is a resevoir about 100 miles south of me that was once reguraded as one of the best trout fisheries in the state as late as the late 70's...now if somebody catches a trout there it makes local news...:lol: But it's awesome walleye fishing...
Our Game and Fish department here hasn't tried to eradicate walleye, rather they manage and contain them (mostly because they are a very desireable game fish). They stock most walleye waters with lots of trout, and if they show up somewhere where they were not before, they take more drastic measures, especially if populations of cutthroat trout are threatened. Case in point, a non-native fish can quickly threaten native ones...
Krish, not sure how it works in the Bahamas, but if you have a Game and Fish, or similar angency that regualtes and manages hunting and fishing, you should contact them and see what their policy is reguarding these fish. There are some fish here in Wyoming that G&F requests that anglers destroy upon catching, and report the location of where you caught that fish. There may be a similar policy in effect in your area reguarding lionfish or other non-native species...
MikeS