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Invasive Australian Jellyfish Sighted in Gulf of Mexico,
Summer 2007;
Range now extends from Texas to North Carolina
The invasive Australian jellyfish, Phyllorhiza punctata,
first reported in great quantities in the Gulf of Mexico in
2000, has made a vigorous reappearance this summer in waters
from southwestern Louisiana to Morehead City, North
Carolina. Beachgoers and boaters are encouraged to report
their sightings of these exotic jellies to the Dauphin
Island Sea Lab’s jellyfish website, Dockwatch, at http://dockwatch.disl.org.
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Phyllorhiza punctata,
the Australian spotted jellyfish. (Photo by Dan
Martin)
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Since 2000, Phyllorhiza has been sighted in the Gulf
as far west as Galveston Bay, Texas, but only in small
numbers. This year, not only are their numbers higher, but
their range has extended up to the Mid-Atlantic states.
“Reports from the Panhandle of Florida and North Carolina
indicate they’re pretty concentrated elsewhere,” states
Dauphin Island Sea Lab
Senior Marine Scientist Dr. Monty Graham. Ranging in size
from a softball to a basketball, the Australian jellyfish
present little to no danger in terms of their sting. A
preponderance of jellies, however, could pose a threat to
the commercial fishing and shrimping industry as they foul
trawling nets and consume eggs and larvae of important
fishery species.
“We just started getting reports of Phyllorhiza
appearing on the east coast of Florida and as far up as
North Carolina this year. We don’t think that jellies
from the Gulf are pouring up the coast necessarily, but the
appearances and concentrations of these animals in both
places may be related,” says Dr. Graham.
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“Phyllorhiza are prolific feeders; they can compete
with commercially important fish for food, and they also eat
the larvae of these fish. In their native waters, they tend
to be fist-sized; here in the Gulf, they can be a big as
dinner plates.”
“We absolutely depend on the public’s reporting the
appearance of these creatures. We don’t have the resources
to survey the waters continuously, and by tracking their
numbers and locations, we can try to get a handle on why
they’re here in such concentrations and what impact they
have on the ecosystem,” he concludes.
Dockwatch has been funded by the Mississippi-Alabama Sea
Grant Consortium.
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Dauphin
Island Sea Lab, 101 Bienville Blvd, Dauphin Island, AL 36528 / (251)
861- 2141
For
questions regarding any of these stories, please contact the editor:
lyoung@disl.org |