JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Saturday, April 5, 2025

Vendors sceptical about lionfish

...peo­ple come to Mara­cas for bake and shark

by

20140316

Li­on­fish and bake may taste de­li­cious but the mis­con­cep­tion that it is poi­so­nous re­mains the biggest ob­sta­cle for its ac­cep­tance as an al­ter­na­tive to shark and bake.This is the view of Uni­ver­si­ty of Southamp­ton post­grad­u­ate re­searcher Fadi­lah Ali. Ali, the PhD can­di­date who has dis­sect­ed more than 10,000 li­on­fish, told the Sun­day Guardian via e-mail that the li­on­fish was not poi­so­nous, but that the tips of its barbs con­tained ven­om in­stead. If it stuck some­one, it would be painful but was not fa­tal, and no one has died from it.

Ali said through­out the Caribbean there was a great mis­con­cep­tion that the li­on­fish was poi­so­nous and as a re­sult there was a gen­er­al un­will­ing­ness to eat the fish.She said ed­u­ca­tion via the me­dia was the on­ly way to clear up these mis­con­cep­tions and al­so prove to peo­ple the ben­e­fits of eat­ing li­on­fish.

Ali said an­oth­er means was to ex­pose peo­ple to suc­cess­ful case stud­ies us­ing oth­er is­lands like Ja­maica and Be­lize which ex­port­ed li­on­fish. She al­so gave ex­am­ples of li­on­fish culi­nary com­pe­ti­tions, a li­on­fish cook­book–proof that peo­ple were eat­ing li­on­fish and sur­viv­ing.She said or­gan­is­ing li­on­fish tast­ing events was an­oth­er way to over­come this per­cep­tion.

Shark has been good­to the Fer­gu­sons

The Sun­day Guardian re­turned to Mara­cas on Wednes­day and asked ven­dors, fish­er­men and vis­i­tors for their com­ments af­ter the first li­on­fish and bake taste-test was con­duct­ed at Richard's Bake and Shark shop, by Pa­pa Bois Con­ser­va­tion di­rec­tor Marc de Ver­teuil, In­sti­tute of Ma­rine Af­fairs coral reef ecol­o­gist Jah­son Ale­mu and Ali on Feb­ru­ary 15.The shark has been good to the Fer­gu­sons. Four out of the six shark and seafood shops at Mara­cas are owned by fam­i­ly mem­bers, cre­at­ing a ver­i­ta­ble shark-and-bake dy­nasty.

Giselle Fer­gu­son, from Richard's, said since the ar­ti­cle was pub­lished in the Sun­day Guardian's Feb­ru­ary 16 edi­tion, four out of ten peo­ple came to the pop­u­lar es­tab­lish­ment ask­ing if they had li­on­fish on the menu.She said the oth­er six stuck to the bake and shark sta­ple that Richard's is fa­mous for among tourists and lo­cals alike. Fer­gu­son said cus­tomers may prob­a­bly want to try the li­on­fish, but they need­ed more knowl­edge of the species as they were afraid of the li­on­fish's ven­om.

Gary Fer­gu­son, the own­er of Richard's and Giselle's broth­er, said, "A lot of peo­ple came and asked about the li­on­fish, but not every­body wants to try it.

'Peo­ple ask­ing for the fish'

"The feed­back we got from the peo­ple was any­thing that is poi­so­nous they don't want any part of it."They keep ask­ing if I have and I tell them I don't. It was the en­vi­ron­men­tal­ists who brought just a few li­on­fish, and we pre­pared it in our kitchen for them to test."Fer­gu­son said peo­ple will know the dif­fer­ence be­tween the shark and li­on­fish as they were two dif­fer­ent tex­tures and qual­i­ty of meat.He said per­haps li­on­fish could be on the menu in the fu­ture, as well as red fish or grouper and bake, but shark re­mained the main del­i­ca­cy in T&T.

Peo­ple came from all over the world to try Richard's shark and bake as it was al­so very healthy, hence the rea­son why most of the pop­u­la­tion loved shark, Fer­gu­son said with a hearty laugh.He said his grand­moth­er, 95-year-old "Ma" Fer­gu­son, the ma­tri­arch of the fam­i­ly, was liv­ing tes­ta­ment to the health ben­e­fits of eat­ing shark and not eat­ing meat, as she was very strong.Ac­cord­ing to Fer­gu­son, sharks don't de­vel­op can­cer and were good to treat ail­ments such as arthri­tis and in­flam­ma­tion.

How­ev­er, the man­ag­er of the US-based con­ser­va­tion group, Pew Char­i­ta­ble Trusts, An­ge­lo Vil­lagomez said sharks do not have can­cer-fight­ing prop­er­ties.

'I will lose cus­tomer­sif I start to sell it'

Fer­gu­son said sharks were very healthy to eat. His grand­moth­er utilised most parts of the shark, us­ing the liv­er to make shark oil, head, fins and bones which they all grew up on al­so.Pat­sy Fer­gu­son, of Pat­sy's Bake and Shark and Gary's aunt, said the li­on­fish was too dan­ger­ous to eat and was too much of a risk.She said since the Sun­day Guardian's li­on­fish sto­ry was print­ed, a lot of cus­tomers came ask­ing if she was sell­ing it as they want­ed no part of it, be­liev­ing the li­on­fish to be poi­so­nous.

Pat­sy said if she start­ed to sell li­on­fish, she will lose cus­tomers. She said, "When my cus­tomers come here they ask for shark or king fish, they don't want no oth­er fish."Peo­ple use to say we're sell­ing cat­fish, that is a no-no, we sell strict­ly mako shark, blue shark or black­tip shark that comes from Suri­name, we don't get any from Las Cuevas or Mara­cas."Peo­ple used to sell cat­fish but not me or my fam­i­ly."

Ian Fer­gu­son, from Nathalie's Bake and Shark and Gary's broth­er, said peo­ple in Mara­cas were not ac­cus­tomed or fa­mil­iar with li­on­fish and their spe­cial­ty was shark.A bake-and-shark lover said she didn't ask what type of shark she was eat­ing, but she en­joyed it and didn't think of any of the con­se­quences. She said she wouldn't want to eat such a preda­tor like the li­on­fish.

Leo Kow­lessar, a Trinida­di­an liv­ing in New York, said he didn't be­lieve that sharks will ever get wiped out be­cause there were so many dif­fer­ent types of sharks all over the world, and if one species be­came scarce, they will find an­oth­er shark species.

Aboud:Long­line ves­sels dec­i­mat­ing shark, oth­er ma­rine life

Speak­ing in a brief tele­phone in­ter­view from Chi­na, on Thurs­day, Fish­er­men and Friends of the Sea (FFOS) sec­re­tary Gary Aboud said the scores of Tai­wanese long­line fish­ing ves­sels op­er­at­ing in lo­cal wa­ters were re­spon­si­ble not on­ly for dec­i­mat­ing shark species but were al­so de­plet­ing oth­er ma­rine life.Son­ny, from Cana­da, said li­on­fish can prob­a­bly re­place shark if it was be­ing over­fished.

Maria, from Venezuela said shark was not as pop­u­lar in her home­land as here, how­ev­er, it should not be over­fished to the point of ex­tinc­tion. Ter­ry Lee sug­gest­ed cre­at­ingnew and in­no­v­a­tive dish­es in­stead such as li­on­fish ac­cra and pholourie in­stead of look­ing for a sub­sti­tute for shark and bake.Aria said she would have to taste it to make a judg­ment call.John said he wouldn't eat li­on­fish be­cause the ven­om it car­ried was enough of a de­ter­rent.

Fish­er­man "Mas­ter Broth­er John" from the Mara­cas Fish­ing De­pot said one of the fish­er­men re­ceived a punc­ture in his arm from a li­on­fish's barb in his net but the in­jury was not se­ri­ous when he want for med­ical at­ten­tion.John con­firmed the li­on­fish was in T&T wa­ters, but they were on­ly catch­ing a few in their nets.Fish­er­man Clement Var­gas said if the li­on­fish was in abun­dance, it could be used as an al­ter­na­tive to shark, but so can oth­er read­i­ly avail­able species of fish.

An­oth­er fish­er­man named "Djan­go" said those who fish had some species that they kept for them­selves, such as "pow­er," and they knew how to cook cat­fish and even stingray to make them taste like shark and the av­er­age con­sumer wouldn't be able to tell the dif­fer­ence.

Pa­pa Bois launch­escam­paign to save the shark

Pa­pa Bois Con­ser­va­tion launched its cam­paign to raise aware­ness in T&T about the world­wide threats to sharks from over­fish­ing at the cur­rent un­sus­tain­able rate on Feb­ru­ary 23.The launch took place at the Mara­cas turn-off, lead­ing to the bake-and-shark haven in Mara­cas Bay.The re­port was car­ried in the in­ter­na­tion­al me­dia, such as the Lon­don Metro, Wash­ing­ton Post and As­so­ci­at­ed Press.

De Ver­teuil said he was prepar­ing to meet with the shark-and-bake ven­dors to do a pre­sen­ta­tion on shark con­ser­va­tion, the con­se­quences of de­plet­ing shark pop­u­la­tions, and the li­on­fish as a pos­si­ble al­ter­na­tive to shark and bake.

�2 Con­tin­u­ing next week: Con­ser­va­tion­ists, sea food proces­sors and sci­en­tists give their views on the li­on­fish and the world­wide threat to the shark.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored