New fish invade the Adriatic Sea, threatening local species
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[March 20, 2024]
DUBROVNIK, Croatia/KOTOR, Montenegro (Reuters) - For
decades, Croatian fisherman Marko Kristic has cast his nets in the
sparkling waters of the Adriatic Sea. Now an invasion of the
Mediterranean parrotfish is endangering his traditional catch and his
livelihood, he says.
Due to climate change and increased maritime traffic, the parrotfish,
along with around 50 new species, has spread to the Adriatic,
threatening the native fish population.
Kristic said the parrotfish was first spotted in the southern Adriatic
about 15 years ago, but it has since become a common bycatch in his
nets.
While enjoyed as a delicacy in areas where it is native, the parrotfish
is not to the taste of locals around his village of Molunat in southern
Croatia.
"I can't sell it to anyone. The local population won't eat this new
fish," Kristic said.
Nenad Antolovic, a researcher for the Dubrovnik-based Institute for
Marine and Coastal Research, says fish stocks in the Adriatic, the
northernmost arm of the Mediterranean, have slumped due to overfishing,
climate change, and the invasion of new species.
"The Adriatic is changing, it is getting warmer. Because of that, new
organisms appear. By (that) I mean fish and planktons and algae,"
Antolovic said.
According to 2023 data from the Italian National Agency for new
Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development (ENEA), the
Mediterranean is becoming the fastest-warming sea on the planet.
New fish species have arrived in the Mediterranean and the Adriatic from
the Red Sea through the Suez Canal due to warmer waters or carried in
the ballast tanks of ships, endangering the survival of around 460
native fish species, Antolovic said.
Some of the new fish are dangerous for humans, such as the poisonous
lionfish or stonefish.
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Fisherman Marko Krstic is preparing a fishing net in Molunat,
Croatia, March 14, 2024. REUTERS/Antonio Bronic
Last month, a fisherman from the Dubrovnik area caught a smalleye
squaretail, a deep sea dweller, uncommon in the Adriatic.
In neighbouring Montenegro, scientists from the Institute of Marine
Biology in the coastal city of Kotor singled out the blue crab as an
example of an invasive species.
"It arrived ... about 20 years ago and is one of the worst invasive
species in the Mediterranean," said scientist Olivera Markovic.
Fishermen and scientists say stocks of crustaceans such as the green
crab have been cut back, and in some places wiped out altogether.
"The population of the green crab ... has been drastically reduced
since the appearance of the blue crab," Markovic said.
The rabbitfish, pufferfish and lionfish are thriving in warmer
Adriatic waters along the Montenegrin coast, said Ilija Cetkovic, a
researcher at the institute.
The biggest concern is the lionfish.
"(The lionfish) is currently the burning problem ... it is predatory
and inflicts considerable damage to ecosystems," Cetkovic said.
(Reporting by Antonio Bronic, Stevo Vasiljevic and Aleksandar
Vasovic; Editing by Ros Russell)
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