Native to the waters of the Indo-Pacific region, the 12 recognized species of lionfish all sport venomous spikes in their fin rays. Their wild coloration acts as a warning to predators: Eat at your own risk. But across the eastern seaboard of the United States, there’s a campaign encouraging humans to eat lionfish. Why? Because at some point in the 1990s, one or more species of lionfish was introduced to the waters of the Atlantic, Caribbean, and Gulf of Mexico. The invasive lionfish will eat nearly anything they can, and as a result, are decimating native fish populations. Would you eat a lionfish? (Properly prepared, of course.)
Lionfish off the coast of Indonesia
Today in History
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Riding the bore tide at Turnagain Arm, Cook Inlet, Alaska
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What s cuter than nuzzling rhinos?
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Miravet, Catalonia, Spain
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47 years of Badlands National Park
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Get amped for Glastonbury
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Earth Science Week
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International Cheetah Day
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Brown bears, Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska
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Let the Highland games begin
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National Bird Day
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Walton Lighthouse, Santa Cruz, California
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Earth Day
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Friendship Day in the City of Brotherly Love
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Northern hawk-owl
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Zion National Park, Utah
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Adorably evolutionary sea sheep
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Common raven
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Mount Fuji Day
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It s Star Wars Day
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Aprils full moon
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The most Instagrammable bird?
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National Audubon Society s Christmas Bird Count
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In the footsteps of Leopold Bloom
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National Park Week
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Penguin Awareness Day
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Where can you find a red fox?
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Looking back at Yellowstone, 30 years after the fires
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Lake Tekapo, New Zealand
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Why’s it called a spelling ‘bee,’ anyhow?
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Polar bear season in Manitoba
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