Giant Jellyfish Swarm Northward Due To Global Warming

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First Posted: 11-16-09 02:17 PM   |   Updated: 11-16-09 04:38 PM

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Jellyfish

MICHAEL CASEY, AP Environmental Writer

KOKONOGI, Japan - A blood-orange blob the size of a small refrigerator emerged from the dark waters, its venomous tentacles trapped in a fishing net. Within minutes, hundreds more were being hauled up, a pulsating mass crowding out the catch of mackerel and sea bass.

The fishermen leaned into the nets, grunting and grumbling as they tossed the translucent jellyfish back into the bay, giants weighing up to 200 kilograms (450 pounds), marine invaders that are putting the men's livelihoods at risk.

The venom of the Nomura, the world's largest jellyfish, a creature up to 2 meters (6 feet) in diameter, can ruin a whole day's catch by tainting or killing fish stung when ensnared with them in the maze of nets here in northwest Japan's Wakasa Bay.

"Some fishermen have just stopped fishing," said Taiichiro Hamano, 67. "When you pull in the nets and see jellyfish, you get depressed."

This year's jellyfish swarm is one of the worst he has seen, Hamano said. Once considered a rarity occurring every 40 years, they are now an almost annual occurrence along several thousand kilometers (miles) of Japanese coast, and far beyond Japan.

Scientists believe climate change -- the warming of oceans -- has allowed some of the almost 2,000 jellyfish species to expand their ranges, appear earlier in the year and increase overall numbers, much as warming has helped ticks, bark beetles and other pests to spread to new latitudes.

The gelatinous seaborne creatures are blamed for decimating fishing industries in the Bering and Black seas, forcing the shutdown of seaside power and desalination plants in Japan, the Middle East and Africa, and terrorizing beachgoers worldwide, the U.S. National Science Foundation says.

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A 2008 foundation study cited research estimating that people are stung 500,000 times every year -- sometimes multiple times -- in Chesapeake Bay on the U.S. East Coast, and 20 to 40 die each year in the Philippines from jellyfish stings.

In 2007, a salmon farm in Northern Ireland lost its more than 100,000 fish to an attack by the mauve stinger, a jellyfish normally known for stinging bathers in warm Mediterranean waters. Scientists cite its migration to colder Irish seas as evidence of global warming.

Increasingly polluted waters -- off China, for example -- boost growth of the microscopic plankton that "jellies" feed upon, while overfishing has eliminated many of the jellyfish's predators and cut down on competitors for plankton feed.

"These increases in jellyfish should be a warning sign that our oceans are stressed and unhealthy," said Lucas Brotz, a University of British Columbia researcher.

Here on the rocky Echizen coast, amid floodlights and the roar of generators, fishermen at Kokonogi's bustling port made quick work of the day's catch -- packaging glistening fish and squid in Styrofoam boxes for shipment to market.

In rain jackets and hip waders, they crowded around a visitor to tell how the jellyfish have upended a way of life in which men worked fishing trawlers on the high seas in their younger days and later eased toward retirement by joining one of the cooperatives operating nets set in the bay.

It was a good living, they said, until the jellyfish began inundating the bay in 2002, sometimes numbering 500 million, reducing fish catches by 30 percent and slashing prices by half over concerns about quality.

Two nets in Echizen burst last month during a typhoon because of the sheer weight of the jellyfish, and off the east coast jelly-filled nets capsized a 10-ton trawler as its crew tried to pull them up. The three fishermen were rescued.

"We have been getting rid of jellyfish. But no matter how hard we try, the jellyfish keep coming and coming," said Fumio Oma, whose crew is out of work after their net broke under the weight of thousands of jellyfish. "We need the government's help to get rid of the jellyfish."

The invasions cost the industry up to 30 billion yen ($332 million) a year, and tens of thousands of fishermen have sought government compensation, said scientist Shin-ichi Uye, Japan's leading expert on the problem.

Hearing fishermen's pleas, Uye, who had been studying zooplankton, became obsessed with the little-studied Nomura's jellyfish, scientifically known as Nemopilema nomurai, which at its biggest looks like a giant mushroom trailing dozens of noodle-like tentacles.

"No one knew their life cycle, where they came from, where they reproduced," said Uye, 59. "This jellyfish was like an alien."

He artificially bred Nomura's jellyfish in his Hiroshima University lab, learning about their life cycle, growth rates and feeding habits. He traveled by ferry between China to Japan this year to confirm they were riding currents to Japanese waters.

He concluded China's coastal waters offered a perfect breeding ground: Agricultural and sewage runoff are spurring plankton growth, and fish catches are declining. The waters of the Yellow Sea, meanwhile, have warmed as much as 1.7 degrees C (3 degrees F) over the past quarter-century.

"The jellyfish are becoming more and more dominant," said Uye, as he sliced off samples of dead jellyfish on the deck of an Echizen fishing boat. "Their growth rates are quite amazing."

The slight, bespectacled scientist is unafraid of controversy, having lobbied his government tirelessly to help the fishermen, and angered Chinese colleagues by arguing their government must help solve the problem, comparing it to the effects of acid rain that reaches Japan from China.

"The Chinese people say they will think about this after they get rich, but it might be too late by then," he said.

A U.S. marine scientist, Jennifer Purcell of Western Washington University, has found a correlation between warming and jellyfish on a much larger scale, in at least 11 locations, including the Mediterranean and North seas, and Chesapeake and Narragansett bays.

"It's hard to deny that there is an effect from warming," Purcell said. "There keeps coming up again and again examples of jellyfish populations being high when it's warmer." Some tropical species, on the other hand, appear to decline when water temperatures rise too high.

Even if populations explode, their numbers may be limited in the long term by other factors, including food and currents. In a paper last year, researchers concluded jellyfish numbers in the Bering Sea -- which by 2000 were 40 times higher than in 1982 -- declined even as temperatures have hit record highs.

"They were still well ahead of their historic averages for that region," said co-author Lorenzo Ciannelli of Oregon State University. "But clearly jellyfish populations are not merely a function of water temperature."

Addressing the surge in jellyfish blooms in most places will require long-term fixes, such as introducing fishing quotas and pollution controls, as well as capping greenhouse gas emissions to control global warming, experts said.

In the short term, governments are left with few options other than warning bathers or bailing out cash-strapped fishermen. In Japan, the government is helping finance the purchase of newly designed nets, a layered system that snares jellyfish with one kind of net, allowing fish through to be caught in another.

Some entrepreneurs, meanwhile, are trying to cash in. One Japanese company is selling giant jellyfish ice cream, and another plans a pickled plum dip with chunks of giant jellyfish. But, though a popular delicacy, jellyfish isn't likely to replace sushi or other fish dishes on Asian menus anytime soon, in view of its time-consuming processing, heavy sodium overload and unappealing image.

___

Associated Press writer Shino Yuasa contributed to this report from Tokyo.

MICHAEL CASEY, AP Environmental Writer KOKONOGI, Japan - A blood-orange blob the size of a small refrigerator emerged from the dark waters, its venomous tentacles trapped in a fishing net. Within min...
MICHAEL CASEY, AP Environmental Writer KOKONOGI, Japan - A blood-orange blob the size of a small refrigerator emerged from the dark waters, its venomous tentacles trapped in a fishing net. Within min...
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since when are envirowhackos concerned about the livelihood of japanese fishermen? Last i saw they were trying to put them out of business anyway!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:52 PM on 11/18/2009
- New realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 146 fans permalink

Yes, Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck are looking out for your best interests. Keep listening!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 AM on 11/19/2009
- New LeftRight I'm a Fan of LeftRight 106 fans permalink
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You betcha. That's all that we care about, is fishermen having no rights to fish. That's why we stopped the irrigation in California, so that a FISH could continue to live, thus providing a food chain for the larger fish that fishermen ACTUALLY CATCH!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 AM on 11/19/2009
- Tommygun264 I'm a Fan of Tommygun264 189 fans permalink
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These jelly fish are truly fascinating. All the stinging parts are in the frilly tentacles - the smooth dome does not sting. One week after each full moon the waters on the south shore of Oahu here in Hawaii are filled with small, freshly bred jellies. One day I was swimming inside the rocks dividing the beach at Ala Moana park from the open water at low tide and felt soft things brushing my lower legs. I thought it was maybe bits of paper towel from the picnic areas blown into the water and breaking into mush. I looked down and saw a thick carpet of translucent white jellyfish, each 2" to 4" wide swimming the other way about 3 feet down - their non-stinging domes had brushed my legs. I shifted my weight to raise my legs up and watched a few minutes as they pulsed past below me before I woke up and stopped tempting fate and headed to shore. I remember reading they are more a colony of specialized creatures acting in a symbiotic relationship with no central nervous system, rather than a single organism. Whatever they are, they are mesmerizing.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 AM on 11/17/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 146 fans permalink

Nicely said, you should be a writer! I guess jelly fish reminds me then of conservatives - they act as a colony of creatures in a symbiotic relationship with no central nervous system, rather than as a single organism. They also will eat their young! The jelly fish do not have too many independent thinkers and neither do conservatives!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 AM on 11/17/2009
- Kruddler I'm a Fan of Kruddler 12 fans permalink

And one can never have too many exclamation marks!!!!!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 AM on 11/18/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 146 fans permalink

As the article says, "The waters of the Yellow Sea, meanwhile, have warmed as much as 1.7 degrees C (3 degrees F) over the past quarter-century." A three degree rise in temperatures in 25 years is incredible. So much of the earth's man-made co2 is going into the oceans to raise temperatures. Then the ecosystem becomes out of whack. Japanese fisherman are losing their livelihoods. Fish prices grow much more expensive. "It's hard to deny that there is an effect from warming," a U.S. marine scientist, Jennifer Purcell of Western Washington University said.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:59 AM on 11/17/2009
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One day it's overfishing - bad fishermen.
the next it's - the fishermen, the fishermen, must protect their livelihood.

Use jellyfish for sushi wrappers.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:50 AM on 11/17/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 146 fans permalink

Spikey, why are conservatives so anti-intellectual at their core. You guys won't be happy until our brains turn to mush from inactivity than we will all be conservatives!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 11/17/2009
- Kruddler I'm a Fan of Kruddler 12 fans permalink

Hey rp, got a link to some comparative Yellow Sea SST data handy? I'd like to be able to glibly swallow the information provided in outstanding journalistic articles such as this one the way you do, but I just can't do it...must be that conservative independent thinking disease.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:31 AM on 11/18/2009
- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 146 fans permalink

If you read the article carefully, which is difficult for deniers who read the healines and then rush to make comments. the journalist is quoting scientist Shin-ichi Uye, Japan's leading expert on the problem. He is the one who identifies rising Red Sea temperatures. Now he may be lying, but deniers are expert at knowing when scientists are lying. You see, deniers have an insight that undermines a whole scientiifc field with a vast consensus. So I'll leave it to deniers to say if Dr. Uye is speaking the truth.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:18 AM on 11/18/2009
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Jellyfish - the latest climate change refugees. Twenty days until the UN Climate Change Conference starts in Copenhagen. Stop lowering expectations and fight for the planet - it's not over until it's over.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:06 PM on 11/16/2009
- garcia83 I'm a Fan of garcia83 4 fans permalink
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these damn jelly fish need to go back south and fix their own waters, instead of bumming off the hardworking jelly fish up here.

they come to our waters, they don't learn the language and they expect us to just let them in! where's lou dobbs when you need him???

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:19 PM on 11/16/2009

The ocean is finding a way to protect itself from overfishing by humans.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:14 PM on 11/16/2009
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Send in the Jellies.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:26 PM on 11/16/2009
- fumes I'm a Fan of fumes 74 fans permalink
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smoked jellyfish? ''hey mates.. put another jelly on the barbie.. company's comin' over!''
say Spiky Kitten.. what would go with grilled jfish.. a peanut butter rub lol?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:50 PM on 11/16/2009
- chedet I'm a Fan of chedet 26 fans permalink
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that's one creepy looking sea creature.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:32 PM on 11/16/2009
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It would be good for the world, and in particular for thuna population, if the japanese and otherwise would indeed start to make jellyfish sushi...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:02 PM on 11/16/2009
- sherbug I'm a Fan of sherbug 50 fans permalink

China is going to self destruct. They take no responsibility for their pollution and the only thing they are concerned with is under cutting everybody else.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:54 PM on 11/16/2009
- chedet I'm a Fan of chedet 26 fans permalink
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but we are supporting them are we not? we give them business. Are we still innocent?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 PM on 11/16/2009
- emily00011 I'm a Fan of emily00011 33 fans permalink

The US is going down the path too. read up on this drilling frenzy gripping the country, and you will start worrying a lot, if you aren't already.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:00 PM on 11/16/2009
- sherbug I'm a Fan of sherbug 50 fans permalink

We are already in destruct mode. At the rate we are going, we will be broke before my teenage kids reach adulthood. We will become the beggars of the world.

I do believe its already too late for us. This country is too gripped with greed and corruption.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:57 PM on 11/16/2009
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Almost a pest like a mosquito but impossible to eradicate. If it were giant shrimp in the fishermen's nets instead of jellies global warming might be all the rage.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 11/16/2009
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Squid and some species of wales eat jelly fish:
There should be a population explosion in these two groups soon enough.

Calamari anyone?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:36 PM on 11/16/2009
- shockmagog I'm a Fan of shockmagog 137 fans permalink
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Unfortunately, whale and squid are even more tasty than jellyfish.

Let the imbalance continue.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 AM on 11/17/2009
- fumes I'm a Fan of fumes 74 fans permalink
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so jellyfish can adapt..

but we're gonna go extinct?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:05 PM on 11/16/2009
- zola77 I'm a Fan of zola77 29 fans permalink
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Larger animals have a harder time surviving through climate changes historically. Think back to the megafauna extinctions of the past. Larger animals have a slower reproduction rate and need more resources (ie land and food) to survive. They are usually also specialised to live in one area/in one set of cicumstances.

Smaller animals have a better chance at survival because they generally have faster reproduction rates and need less room/food to survive, hence they are more adaptable.

Make no mistake, global warming will hit us hardest if we dont start taking it seriously.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 PM on 11/16/2009
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Fumes for Hopenhagen Ambassador.

It's a grass roots campaign.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 PM on 11/16/2009
- emily00011 I'm a Fan of emily00011 33 fans permalink

humans typically have 3 generations per century, some insects go through that many per day. Who do you think is going to adapt fastest?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 PM on 11/16/2009
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We do not need to adapt:

We: heat and cool our homes, bring water to the desert, stay for extended times in; space, under water, north pole, south poles, and the driest environments known.

We adapt our living and working spaces to our tolerances.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 PM on 11/16/2009
- Warlock67 I'm a Fan of Warlock67 6 fans permalink

The jelly fish don't exist ...just like global warming.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 11/16/2009
- chedet I'm a Fan of chedet 26 fans permalink
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LOL

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 PM on 11/16/2009
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Is there a bounty on these jellyfish? like 4 for $

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 11/16/2009
- shthar I'm a Fan of shthar 5 fans permalink

Now that's good Eatin!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 PM on 11/16/2009
- CreekCM I'm a Fan of CreekCM 4 fans permalink
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That looks like an alien palm on a giant butt. Nice!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 11/16/2009
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