Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6361971 Marine Pollution Bulletin 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Pterois volitans and Pterois miles, two sub-species of lionfish, have become the first non-native, invasive marine fish established along the United States Atlantic coast and Caribbean. The route and timing of the invasion is poorly understood, however historical sightings and captures have been robustly documented since their introduction. Herein we analyze these records based on spatial location, dates of arrival, and prevailing physical factors at the capture sights. Using a cellular automata model, we examine the relationship between depth, salinity, temperature, and current, finding the latter as the most influential parameter for transport of lionfish to new areas. The model output is a synthetic validated reproduction of the lionfish invasion, upon which predictive simulations in other locations can be based. This predictive model is simple, highly adaptable, relies entirely on publicly available data, and is applicable to other species.

► Predictive GIS cellular automata model for invasive species. ► GIS model output predicts Gulf of Mexico lionfish invasion. ► Ocean current most influential factor in lionfish spread. ► Statistical analysis of USGS-NAS lionfish records. ► Lionfish invasion occurred in three distinct stages.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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