Giant jelly fish are taking over parts of the world's oceans due to overfishing and other human activities, say researchers.
Dr Anthony Richardson of CSIRO Marine & Atmospheric Research and colleagues, report their findings in the journal Trends in Ecology and Evolution.
"We need to take management action to avert the marine systems of the world flipping over to being jellyfish dominated," says Richardson, who is also a marine biologist at the University of Queensland.
Richardson says jellyfish numbers are increasing, particularly in Southeast Asia, the Black Sea, the Gulf of Mexico and the North Sea.
He says the Japanese have a real problem with giant jellyfish that burst through fishing nets.
"[They're] a jelly fish called Nomura, which is the biggest jellyfish in the world. It can weigh 200 kilograms, as big as a sumo wrestler and is 2 metres in diameter," says Richardson.
Richardson and colleagues reviewed literature linking jellyfish blooms with overfishing and eutrophication - high levels of nutrients.
Jellyfish are normally kept in check by fish, which eat small jellyfish and compete for jellyfish food such as zooplankton, he says.
But, with overfishing, jellyfish numbers are increasing. Jellyfish feed on fish eggs and larvae, further impacting on fish numbers.
To add insult to injury, nitrogen and phosphorous in run-off cause red phytoplankton blooms, which create low-oxygen dead zones where jellyfish survive, but fish can't.
"You can think of them like a protected area for jellyfish," says Richardson.
Richardson and colleagues say climate change may also encourage more jellyfish.
They have postulated for the first time that these conditions can lead to what they call a "jellyfish stable state", in which jellyfish rule the oceans.
Richardson and colleagues recommend a number of actions in their paper, to coincide with World Oceans Day.
They say it's important to reduce overfishing, especially of small pelagic fish, like sardines, and to reduce run-off.
They also say it's important to control the transport of jellyfish around the world in ballast water and aquariums.
Richardson says researchers are experimenting with different ways of controlling jellyfish.
Some methods involve sound waves to explode jellyfish, while others use special nets to try and cut them up.
Jellyfish are considered simple jelly-like sea animals, which are related to the microscopic animals that form coral.
They generally start their life as a plant-like polyp on the sea bed before budding off into the well-known bell-shaped medusa.
Jellyfish have tentacles containing pneumatocyst cells, which act like little harpoons that lodge in prey to sting and kill them.
The location and number of pneumatocysts dictate whether jellyfish are processed for human consumption.
While dried jellyfish with soya sauce is a delicacy served in Chinese weddings and banquets, not all kinds of jellyfish can be eaten, says Richardson.
According to Richardson, the species increasing in number aren't generally eaten.
i wonder if the solution is more sea turtles?
Originally posted by the Bear:i wonder if the solution is more sea turtles?
We need some giant turtles to whack these sumo jellyfish.
WAH!!!! 0_0
Nice! I want to see the sound waves exploding jellyfishes.
Should be interesting to see how the fishermen intend to wrestle 200kg jellyfish in razor netx ^^
Immortal has been found.
The turritopsis nutricula jellyfish appears to be immortal, rejuvinating itself after it becomes an adult.[22]
Eat them la....
And they taste good anyway
Originally posted by HyuugaNeji:Immortal has been found.
The turritopsis nutricula jellyfish appears to be immortal, rejuvinating itself after it becomes an adult.[22]
Nice article. Thanks.
Originally posted by the Bear:i wonder if the solution is more sea turtles?
We can always shred the jellyfish as food for the Bear.
Originally posted by Herzog_Zwei:
We can always shred the jellyfish as food for the Bear.
You mean turtle farming?
They taste good when they are well seasoned for cold-dishes.
Send the Chinese in!
Originally posted by ditzy:Send the Chinese in!
Big$$$
Originally posted by ditzy:Send the Chinese in!
Japanese also eat them.
The nips should stop hunting whales and start hunting jellyfish.
Not only giant jellyfish threaten to dominate oceans, poisonous and toxic plants and animals will appear in greater numbers and frequency as the pollution worsens...
anyway, the Japanese are trying to eat the Nomura.. kinda novelty food... dried and salted...
some of them have turned it into jellyfish tofu and a few turned it into some kind of jellyfish collagen...
now.. if they manage to market the collagen as some kind of beauty treatment, the Nomura may be wiped out pretty quickly by women
Once they eat those jellyfish collagen, they will mutate into jellyfish themselves and go on a rampage
Originally posted by the Bear:anyway, the Japanese are trying to eat the Nomura.. kinda novelty food... dried and salted...
some of them have turned it into jellyfish tofu and a few turned it into some kind of jellyfish collagen...
now.. if they manage to market the collagen as some kind of beauty treatment, the Nomura may be wiped out pretty quickly by women
I tot anything goes in ah Bear's diet plan?
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
New research led by CSIRO Climate
Adaptation Flagship and University of Queensland scientist, Dr Anthony
Richardson, presents convincing evidence that this 'jellyfish joyride' is
associated with over-fishing and excess nutrients from fertilisers and sewage.
"Dense jellyfish aggregations can be a natural feature of healthy ocean
ecosystems, but a clear picture is now emerging of more severe and frequent
jellyfish outbreaks worldwide," Dr Richardson says.
"In recent years,
jellyfish blooms have been recorded in the Mediterranean, the Gulf of Mexico,
the Black and Caspian Seas, the Northeast US coast, and particularly in Far East
coastal waters.
"The most dramatic have been the outbreaks in the Sea of
Japan involving the gargantuan Nomura jellyfish which can grow up to 2 m in
diameter and weigh 200 kg."
The new research, by Dr Richardson and
colleagues at the University of Miami, Swansea University and the University of
the Western Cape, has been published in the international journal; Trends in
Ecology and Evolution, in time for World Oceans Day on 8 June.
"Fish
normally keep jellyfish in check through competition and predation but
overfishing can destroy that balance," Dr Richardson says. "For example, off
Namibia intense fishing has decimated sardine stocks and jellyfish have replaced
them as the dominant species."
Climate change may favour some jellyfish
species by increasing the availability of flagellates in surface waters – a key
jellyfish food source. Warmer oceans could also extend the distribution of many
jellyfish species.
"Mounting evidence suggests that open-ocean
ecosystems can flip from being dominated by fish, to being dominated by
jellyfish," Dr Richardson says "This would have lasting ecological, economic and
social consequences.
"We need to start managing the marine environment
in a holistic and precautionary way to prevent more examples of what could be
termed a 'jellyfish joyride'."
###
CSIRO Australia
The Japanese should include these giant jelly fish in their "scientific study".
If the pollution continues, earth will be transformed back into a world filled with toxic plants and animals...humanity will be struggling to survive...
Make me think of e movie wat's it called again where they travel v deep down den got e rnd rnd thingy den mess w e minds of those ppl inside. black black colour den lots of jelly fish de =x Then e guy was holdin a half written book of 2000 leagues under e sea. The story stop there. Bla bla bla. Abt like tat one leh attack of e jelly fish. Was in e 90's movies i think. Then few survived i guess. Or is it one. Lai all help me piece e puzzle jelly fish sea movie.
Could they harvest the jellyfish and make into animal feed?
Spiderman goes jellyfish hunting is the movie...