Located on the Caribbean coast of Central America and flanked by the second longest barrier reef in the world, Belize is a nation reliant upon marine resources. Each year, the country’s predominantly small-scale fisheries generate an estimated US$22 million in revenue – 1.8%of GDP – and employ 3000 people. However, the nation’s fishing communities are facing an unprecedented challenge. Existing threats posed by declining fish stocks have been exacerbated by the introduction of the invasive alien red lionfish Pterois volitans in 2008. This Indo-Pacific predator has the potential to cause significant losses to the recruitment of native fish, in turn disrupting coral reef community dynamics in the Belize Barrier Reef Reserve System, a UNESCO W...
Lionfish (genus Pterois) are a carnivorous, venomous fish native to the Indo-Pacific that are now in...
The effects of climate change and marine invasive species have posed a major threat to significant e...
Since their introduction to the western Atlantic, invasive lionfish have had significantly harmful e...
The invasion of Indo-Pacific lionfish is one of the most pressing concerns in the context of coral r...
The global nature of travel and trade has increased the potential for the spread of invasive species...
With a voracious appetite for juvenile fish and invertebrates, invasive alien red lionfish (Pterois ...
The Indo-Pacific lionfish (Pterois volitans) is a venomous, voracious predator with a hi...
In the last few decades, invasive lionfish from the Indo-Pacific, Pterois volitans and Pterois miles...
Across the Caribbean, targeted fishing is gaining momentum as a cost-effective method to...
Invasive species generate significant environmental and economic costs, with maintenance management ...
The Indo-Pacific lionfish (Pterois miles and P. volitans) is now one of the most notorious marine fi...
Invasive species alter ecosystem integrity and functioning and are considered one of the major threa...
Native to the Indo-Pacific region, the lionfish (Pterois volitans and P. miles) has been classified ...
Lionfish Pterois volitans and P. miles have spread rapidly throughout the Caribbean Sea since 1985, ...
Invasive lionfish are affecting reef ecosystems along the Gulf Coast and Caribbean. By establishing ...
Lionfish (genus Pterois) are a carnivorous, venomous fish native to the Indo-Pacific that are now in...
The effects of climate change and marine invasive species have posed a major threat to significant e...
Since their introduction to the western Atlantic, invasive lionfish have had significantly harmful e...
The invasion of Indo-Pacific lionfish is one of the most pressing concerns in the context of coral r...
The global nature of travel and trade has increased the potential for the spread of invasive species...
With a voracious appetite for juvenile fish and invertebrates, invasive alien red lionfish (Pterois ...
The Indo-Pacific lionfish (Pterois volitans) is a venomous, voracious predator with a hi...
In the last few decades, invasive lionfish from the Indo-Pacific, Pterois volitans and Pterois miles...
Across the Caribbean, targeted fishing is gaining momentum as a cost-effective method to...
Invasive species generate significant environmental and economic costs, with maintenance management ...
The Indo-Pacific lionfish (Pterois miles and P. volitans) is now one of the most notorious marine fi...
Invasive species alter ecosystem integrity and functioning and are considered one of the major threa...
Native to the Indo-Pacific region, the lionfish (Pterois volitans and P. miles) has been classified ...
Lionfish Pterois volitans and P. miles have spread rapidly throughout the Caribbean Sea since 1985, ...
Invasive lionfish are affecting reef ecosystems along the Gulf Coast and Caribbean. By establishing ...
Lionfish (genus Pterois) are a carnivorous, venomous fish native to the Indo-Pacific that are now in...
The effects of climate change and marine invasive species have posed a major threat to significant e...
Since their introduction to the western Atlantic, invasive lionfish have had significantly harmful e...