If the info is correct, they are at 8 times the level of fish per unit of measurement in the Bahamas as they are in their native habitat....like the southern Philippines. Given that we now see that they can reproduce out of control, I think it is prudent and practical to "weed the yard" by having working divemasters kill them on every dive. Here in Belize there is a bounty on them since there have now been three or four sitings. If, in time, we see that they stableize or reduce to normal levels of populations seen in their natural habitats, and the other reef fish numbers return to normal in places like the Bahamas, you're right, we'll stop the slaughter. But for now in Belize I'm going to kill every....single...one I see. Dead meat. What have we got to lose by trying? We have a pretty good idea of what will happen if we do nothing.
We've screwed up so many places with invasives....look at Hawaii. Anyway, I'm done.... KILL THE LIONFISH
Good on ya! The information is correct. But it's an average - some reefs have more, some less and it's not known yet if the density increase has stopped yet. On the last dive of our September survey, with a lot of people just relaxing and not catching, we caught 56 in 40 minutes. Caught, not speared, not observed, caught and bagged. One little dive area. And handling after catching them is a slow, careful process. We could have speared 100+. Gen San Chris hasn't seen that many in a hundred dives. Maybe we should send him some snakeheads, Nile fish, Great Lakes lampreys, etc. He would have a ball watching nature "accomodate them" in the Phillipines.