The Prague Post - Greek fishermen struggle to keep up with pufferfish invaders

EUR -
AED 4.26405
AFN 74.30922
ALL 95.30941
AMD 427.799026
ANG 2.078793
AOA 1065.866889
ARS 1659.456457
AUD 1.640447
AWG 2.091707
AZN 1.979207
BAM 1.961757
BBD 2.3382
BDT 142.793598
BGN 1.96324
BHD 0.437529
BIF 3448.571704
BMD 1.161076
BND 1.490526
BOB 8.02236
BRL 5.875274
BSD 1.160925
BTN 110.363121
BWP 15.628456
BYN 3.212054
BYR 22757.082644
BZD 2.33489
CAD 1.621709
CDF 2664.668957
CHF 0.921389
CLF 0.026539
CLP 1044.492266
CNY 7.862226
CNH 7.845655
COP 4055.091523
CRC 528.103604
CUC 1.161076
CUP 30.768505
CVE 110.600843
CZK 24.112697
DJF 206.737766
DKK 7.474157
DOP 68.166991
DZD 154.649499
EGP 59.350817
ERN 17.416135
ETB 182.934888
FJD 2.597561
FKP 0.866029
GBP 0.863428
GEL 3.082697
GGP 0.866029
GHS 12.886129
GIP 0.866029
GMD 84.758308
GNF 10169.881185
GTQ 8.849873
GYD 242.887536
HKD 9.098264
HNL 31.043264
HRK 7.533871
HTG 151.790918
HUF 351.294648
IDR 20538.673463
ILS 3.353654
IMP 0.866029
INR 109.80234
IQD 1520.818015
IRR 1597497.856512
ISK 144.196505
JEP 0.866029
JMD 184.018779
JOD 0.823164
JPY 185.859202
KES 150.277979
KGS 101.53542
KHR 4664.162887
KMF 494.617922
KPW 1044.968487
KRW 1753.293506
KWD 0.357773
KYD 0.967538
KZT 567.693821
LAK 25563.624804
LBP 103966.798669
LKR 389.201824
LRD 211.291594
LSL 18.90982
LTL 3.428355
LVL 0.702324
LYD 7.399469
MAD 10.75245
MDL 20.275567
MGA 4844.711128
MKD 61.607973
MMK 2437.034389
MNT 4154.200857
MOP 9.369952
MRU 46.043814
MUR 54.71001
MVR 17.949689
MWK 2013.112885
MXN 19.942598
MYR 4.697742
MZN 74.190868
NAD 18.90982
NGN 1579.887588
NIO 42.71972
NOK 11.015647
NPR 176.581195
NZD 1.983442
OMR 0.446438
PAB 1.160925
PEN 3.948189
PGK 5.083436
PHP 70.180038
PKR 323.001906
PLN 4.239685
PYG 7108.585458
QAR 4.243987
RON 5.235639
RSD 117.359194
RUB 84.182335
RWF 1704.876916
SAR 4.35845
SBD 9.341519
SCR 17.203453
SDG 697.232638
SEK 10.874228
SGD 1.487855
SHP 0.86686
SLE 28.620794
SLL 24347.179995
SOS 663.514785
SRD 43.551363
STD 24031.921651
STN 24.574622
SVC 10.157845
SYP 128.336127
SZL 18.894373
THB 37.827264
TJS 10.819955
TMT 4.075376
TND 3.405942
TOP 2.795592
TRY 53.71728
TTD 7.885946
TWD 36.602327
TZS 3044.518011
UAH 52.020261
UGX 4353.218694
USD 1.161076
UYU 46.89239
UZS 13904.220632
VES 675.697074
VND 30521.776021
VUV 137.208716
WST 3.1854
XAF 657.954902
XAG 0.016586
XAU 0.000269
XCD 3.137865
XCG 2.092253
XDR 0.816673
XOF 657.954902
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.028792
ZAR 18.769769
ZMK 10451.080738
ZMW 20.281586
ZWL 373.865884
  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    22.33

    -0.09%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.26

    -0.18%

  • BCE

    0.0200

    24.59

    +0.08%

  • NGG

    0.3200

    81.84

    +0.39%

  • RYCEF

    0.4600

    17.5

    +2.63%

  • RELX

    0.6300

    33.74

    +1.87%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.8

    -0.23%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.72

    0%

  • BCC

    0.4800

    71.14

    +0.67%

  • RIO

    1.7100

    105.35

    +1.62%

  • VOD

    0.2700

    15.53

    +1.74%

  • BTI

    0.9300

    62.32

    +1.49%

  • GSK

    0.1800

    53.04

    +0.34%

  • AZN

    -3.5300

    178.75

    -1.97%

  • BP

    0.1000

    42.78

    +0.23%

Greek fishermen struggle to keep up with pufferfish invaders
Greek fishermen struggle to keep up with pufferfish invaders / Photo: Will VASSILOPOULOS - AFP

Greek fishermen struggle to keep up with pufferfish invaders

On his fishing boat moored in the Greek port of Ierapetra in southwestern Crete, Alexis Charlambakis pries open the mouth of a freshly-caught pufferfish to reveal two massive teeth on each jaw.

Text size:

"If one of these bites you, it will take your finger clean off," the 43-year-old said. "They are the destruction of the sea. They leave nothing behind."

Proof of the damage is visible on a neighbouring boat deck: a ray, a common seabream and another fish netted that day lie half shredded.

Pufferfish, a warm-water invasive species, were first spotted in Greek waters some 20 years ago and are wreaking havoc with the country's fishing industry, a pillar of the nation's agricultural exports.

Off the coast of Crete, Greece’s largest island, fishermen are seeing their catch dwindle because of the silver-cheeked Lagocephalus sceleratus menace, which typically measures between 40 and 60 cm.

"It’s an omnivorous fish that eats everything it encounters," said 65-year-old fisherman Giannis Giankakis.

"Nothing seems to bother it, because it has no natural predators among other fish," he added.

- Southern invaders -

The pufferfish explosion in Greek waters is the latest example of how warming oceans are changing ecosystems and upturning their reliant economies.

Of the nearly 200 species of pufferfish living in the world’s warm waters, three are currently found in the eastern Mediterranean Sea.

Scientists recorded them for the first time in Greece in June 2005, said Nota Peristeraki of the Hellenic Centre for Marine Research (HCMR).

Present in the Red Sea and in the Indian and Pacific oceans, the silver-cheeked pufferfish entered the Mediterranean via the Suez Canal, according to Université Côte d’Azur, which records non-native Mediterranean species.

Originally located near Crete and the Dodecanese islands, it has since spread to other areas, Peristeraki said.

- 'We cannot survive' -

In addition to their powerful toxin that makes them deadly to eat, these members of the Tetraodontidae family have a beak-like mouth strong enough to bite through wood and metal.

They not only ravage the fishermen's daily catch, but leave their nets in tatters too.

"If this wasn't my boat, I'd quit this profession for good," Charlambakis said.

"The situation is dire...we cannot survive," he told AFP.

After five days at sea, Charlambakis said his nets become useless and difficult to repair.

"It took me two days to fix these nets. I took them out this morning, another 20 holes," he said.

Feasting on other fish, crustaceans and squid, pufferfish cause around 8,500 euros’ ($9,800) worth of damage and lost income per year to fishing boats, said Peristeraki, the HCMR marine biologist.

The predator also contains tetrodotoxin, "an extremely dangerous toxin if ingested," warns HCMR marine biologist Thekla Anastasiou.

"It causes heart failure and stops the lungs from functioning," Anastasiou said.

- 'Worse every year' -

"It is imperative to reduce their population," Peristeraki said.

That's easier said than done, fishermen say.

"The job gets worse every year," said 53-year-old fisherman Kostis Zevelekakis.

"The state isn’t doing enough to help us deal with these fish (...) We can control their numbers if we’re given the right framework to hunt them," he added.

WWF in April released a responsible seafood guide (www.fishguide.wwf.gr) with over a hundred species found on the Greek market.

Among them are 13 invasive species which were not on the previous guide in 2015.

The newcomers include the Atlantic shrimp (Penaeus aztecus) and blue crab (Callinectes sapidus) in the northern Aegean Sea, and the lionfish (Pterois miles) in waters further south.

The fishermen want the state to subsidise them to hunt pufferfish, a programme already running in neighbouring Cyprus.

"They should give us an incentive to round them up," said 25-year-old Babis Doriakis.

"I have taken on my father's fishing boat, but I won't be able to continue without assistance," he said.

Then deputy agriculture minister Christos Kellas in February told parliament that authorities were examining a support programme for fishermen.

- Waste not -

Scientists in the meantime are trying to find ways to neutralise the fish's deadly toxin -- which can cause paralysis, respiratory failure, and death -- in order to make it marketable.

"At present, pufferfish are considered class 1 waste," the equivalent of potentially threatening industrial waste, said Elkethe chemist Manolis Mandalakis.

Under EU rules, the appropriate way to treat this waste is incineration, he said.

"We are trying to find alternative ways...that are less energy-consuming," said Mandalakis.

Potential uses could include fertiliser or fish feed, he said.

I.Horak--TPP