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
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Montreux, Switzerland, and all that jazz
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Travel Sunday: Sintra, Portugal
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Black bear cub emerging into spring
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Fallen but not forgotten
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Presidents Day in America’s front yard
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Pretty, pretty…butterfly?
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National Bison Month
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Let the games (finally) begin!
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International Jazz Day
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Merry Christmas!
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Denali National Park
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Arrr, it be Talk Like a Pirate Day
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The globe skimmers return
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Sanday Island and the North Sea, Scotland
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Christmas Eve
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Brotherly cubs
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April Fools Day
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Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge
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Eurasian scops owl
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World Wildlife Day
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A sleeping green giant
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Boxing Day
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Adorably evolutionary sea sheep
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Mount Hood, Oregon
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Plitvice Lakes National Park, Croatia
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Do spirits haunt the Gardens of Versailles?
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Don’t get lost in there
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Dalmatian pelicans, Lake Kerkini, Greece
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Happy St. Patricks Day!
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Big wheels on a big mountain
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

