beanojones
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If you feel that eating lionfish will solve the problem then that is fine. But I just think you really do not need to do anything to the reef ecosystem other than to leave it alone and conserve the environment. In some studies the lionfish eat up to 80% of the fish on the coral reef and that may sound bad but it still leaves 20% to reproduce. It only takes a few fertile adults to repopulate themselves because fish produce so many offspring. But this is where evolution comes in and those fish that were able to avoid the lionfish will pass on their traits to the next generation and the young will be able to avoid the lionfish as well. The lionfish provides strong selection pressure but this is quickly overcome by the fecundity of the fish. Also, if lionfish become numerous then groupers and snappers will start to hunt them as food and those groupers and snappers that are better able to catch and eat lionfish will pass on their traits to their young and their young will also have those traits. I think that there will be a small window where the native are overwhelmed by the lionfish but they will quickly adapt through natural selection.
If only evolution worked this way it would be nice, and we would never have any animals go extinct because they would all adapt in a single generation, as if driven by an unseen hand. Nor would ecosystems ever undergo permanent change, because there would be the same unseen hand fixing things.
But animals do go extinct and ecosystems do suffer permanent damage from invasive species. Anyone who lives on an island knows this.
Because sometimes the selection is not of individuals but of entire species and ecosystems, and in no case does a single generation result in enough random mutation to allow adaptive behavior.