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  • A man-made sea port cuts Cowichan Bay in half, drastically alterting the water movement which played a large roll in killing historic seagrass beds.
    20210928-DJI_0424.jpg
  • While a fairly minor concern individually, together the invasive species is spreading virus-like throughout the Atlantic Ocean including the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea and the Mediterranean Sea, wreaking havoc on reef ecosystems throughout the region.
    Invader.jpg
  • While the exact source of the lionfish invasion is not known, the aquarium trade is the most likely vector.
    Aquarium
  • Some places, like the gulf side of northern Florida, have especially high densities of lionfish that can sustain an entire commercial fishery.
    Density.jpg
  • A lionfish is fed to a shark. It was once thought that you could teach predators like this Caribbean reef shark to eat lionfish, but there is no evidence any efforts have been working. Sharks tend to hunt weak or dying animals and actually help fish populations beneath them thrive.
    Predators.jpg
  • Seagrasses are known as the "lungs of the ocean" as they produce massive amounts of oxygen through photosynthesis. Like many of our natural and crucial ecosystems they are under threat from climate change, pollution, and other man-made threats.
    Jacks Over Seagrass
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Shane Gross

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