Turkeyfish Day
![lionfish, by jon hanson lionfish, by jon hanson [240x196, 44K]](http://cephalopodcast.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2007/11/90795994-aec234acf5-m.jpg)
lionfish, by jon hanson
Common names: Lionfish, lion fish, zebrafish, firefish, turkeyfish, red lionfish, butterfly cod, ornate butterfly-cod, peacock lionfish, red firefish, scorpion volitans
Happy Turkey Day for those in the States. Ben Franklin famously suggested that the turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) would make a more fitting symbol for the United States than the bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus). Many derisively scoff at the notion, but if you read this account of his recommendation, especially in light of current events, it’s rather telling we chose the latter bird instead.
But there is another turkey out there that I wanted to mention today. This one won’t end up on too many dinner plates, probably because it’s a venomous fish. more commonly known as the lionfish in the United States, Pterois volitans is also called the Turkeyfish in many other parts of the world. Normally found in the Indo-Pacific Ocean, it has recently been found in increasing numbers off the east coast of the U.S. It is a common and spectacular staple of the live reef fish trade and authorities suspect specimens released from aquariums were the original source of the invasive population.
The Turkeyfish is in the Scorpionfish family and is a predator of smaller fish. Authorities fear that as its range expands into new areas, it will have a disruptive effect on the ecology of these environments.
More Turkeyfish Day links appear over at the Invasive Species Weblog.
- NOAA: Lionfish Invasion Teacher’s Guide
- EISF: Lionfish Invasive Species Education & Outreach
- Invasive Lionfish Species Confirmed in Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary
- Wikipedia: Lionfish
Tags: Aquarium, Citizen Science, fish, Florida, invasive species, reefs, SCUBA
November 22nd, 2007 at 5:52 pm
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