Under rules unveiled Monday, recreational fishermen will not need a fishing license to catch the colorful venomous pests as long as they are spearfishing or using a hand-held net. A license still is required to catch lionfish with a hook and line, which is rarely done.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission hopes the new strategy will recruit more divers to the fight to turn back the tide of marauding lionfish.
“They’re our best possible chance to control them,” said John Hunt, director of the Conservation Commission’s Fish and Wildlife Research Institute lab in the Florida Keys.
Divers have been on the front lines of the fight against lionfish from the start, sponsoring fishing contests and participating in lionfish derbies in the Florida Keys.
Lobster fishermen have taken to carrying specially designed spear guns into the water with them to fend off lionfish that increasingly occupy the same reefs as the lobsters.
“The more people going at them (the better),” said Kevin Sweeney, owner of Naples dive shop SCUBAdventures.
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