Jellyfish (also known as
jellies or
sea jellies or
Medusozoa) are free-swimming members of the phylum
Cnidaria. Jellyfish have several different morphologies that represent several different cnidarian classes including the
Scyphozoa (over 200 species),
Staurozoa (about 50 species),
Cubozoa (about 20 species), and
Hydrozoa (about 1000–1500 species that make jellyfish and many more that do not).
''Medusa'' is another word for ''jellyfish'', and refers to any free-swimming jellyfish stages in the phylum Cnidaria.
Jellyfish are found in every ocean, from the surface to the deep sea. Some hydrozoan jellyfish, or hydromedusae, are also found in fresh water; freshwater species are less than an inch (25 mm) in diameter, are colorless and do not sting. Large, often colorful, jellyfish are common in coastal zones worldwide. Scientists have evidence of jellyfish roaming the seas for about 500 million years.
In its broadest sense, the term jellyfish also generally refers to members of the phylum Ctenophora. Although not closely related to cnidarian jellyfish, ctenophores are also free-swimming planktonic carnivores, are generally transparent or translucent, and exist in shallow to deep portions of all the world's oceans.
Alternative names for groups of jellyfish are scyphomedusae, stauromedusae, cubomedusae, and hydromedusae. These may relate to an entire order or class.
Terminology
The word ''jellyfish'' (which has been in common usage for more than a century) is used to denote several different kinds of cnidarians, all of which have a basic body structure that resembles an umbrella, including scyphozoans, staurozoans (stalked jellyfish), hydrozoans, and cubozoans (box jellyfish). Some textbooks and websites refer to scyphozoans as "true jellyfish".
Since jellyfish are not even vertebrates, let alone true fish, the usual word ''jellyfish'' is considered by some to be a misnomer, and American public aquariums have popularized use of the terms ''jellies'' or ''sea jellies'' instead.
In its broadest usage, some scientists occasionally include members of the phylum Ctenophora (comb jellies) when they are referring to jellyfish. Other scientists prefer to use the more all-encompassing term "gelatinous zooplankton", when referring to these, together with other soft-bodied animals in the water column.
A group of jellyfish is sometimes called a bloom or a swarm. "Bloom" is usually used for a large group of jellyfish that gather in a small area, but may also have a time component, referring to seasonal increases, or numbers beyond what was expected.
Another collective name for a group of jellyfish is a ''smack''.
Jellyfish are "bloomy" by nature of their life cycles, being produced by their benthic polyps usually in the spring when sunshine and plankton increase, so they appear rather suddenly and often in large numbers, even when an ecosystem is in balance. Using "swarm" usually implies some kind of active ability to stay together, which a few species like ''Aurelia'', the moon jelly, demonstrate.
Most jellyfish have a second part of their life cycle, which is called the polyp phase. When single polyps, arising from a single fertilized egg, develop into a multiple-polyp cluster, connected to each other by strands of tissue called stolons, they are said to be "colonial." A few polyps never proliferate and are referred to as "solitary" species.
Anatomy
Jellyfish do not have specialized digestive, osmoregulatory, central nervous, respiratory, or circulatory systems. They digest using the gastrodermal lining of the gastrovascular cavity, where nutrients are absorbed. They do not need a respiratory system since their skin is thin enough that the body is oxygenated by diffusion. They have limited control over movement, but can use their hydrostatic skeleton to accomplish movement through contraction-pulsations of the bell-like body; some species actively swim most of the time, while others are passive much of the time. Jellyfish are composed of more than 90% water; most of their umbrella mass is a gelatinous material — the jelly — called mesoglea which is surrounded by two layers of epithelial cells which form the umbrella (top surface) and subumbrella (bottom surface) of the bell, or body.
A jellyfish does not have a brain or central nervous system, but rather has a loose network of nerves, located in the epidermis, which is called a "nerve net". A jellyfish detects various stimuli including the touch of other animals via this nerve net, which then transmits impulses both throughout the nerve net and around a circular nerve ring, through the rhopalial lappet, located at the rim of the jellyfish body, to other nerve cells. Some jellyfish also have ocelli: light-sensitive organs that do not form images but which can detect light, and are used to determine up from down, responding to sunlight shining on the water's surface. These are generally pigment spot ocelli, which have some cells (not all) pigmented.
Jellyfish blooms
The presence of ocean blooms is usually seasonal, responding to prey availability and increasing with temperature and sunshine. Ocean currents tend to congregate jellyfish into large swarms or "blooms", consisting of hundreds or thousands of individuals. In addition to sometimes being concentrated by ocean currents, blooms can result from unusually high populations in some years. Bloom formation is a complex process that depends on ocean currents, nutrients, temperature, predation, and oxygen concentrations. Jellyfish are better able to survive in oxygen-poor water than competitors, and thus can thrive on plankton without competition. Jellyfish may also benefit from saltier waters, as saltier waters contain more iodine, which is necessary for polyps to turn into jellyfish. Rising sea temperatures caused by climate change may also contribute to jellyfish blooms, because many species of jellyfish are better able to survive in warmer waters.
Jellyfish are likely to stay in blooms that are quite large and can reach up to 100,000 in each.
There is very little data about changes in global jellyfish populations over time, besides "impressions" in the public memory. Scientists have little quantitative data of historic or current jellyfish populations. Recent speculation about increases in jellyfish populations are based on no "before" data.
The global increase in jellyfish bloom frequency may stem from human impact. In some locations jellyfish may be filling ecological niches formerly occupied by now overfished creatures, but this hypothesis lacks supporting data. Jellyfish researcher Marsh Youngbluth further clarifies that "jellyfish feed on the same kinds of prey as adult and young fish, so if fish are removed from the equation, jellyfish are likely to move in."
Some jellyfish populations that have shown clear increases in the past few decades are "invasive" species, newly arrived from other habitats: examples include the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, the Baltic Sea, the eastern Mediterranean coasts of Egypt and Israel, and the American coast of the Gulf of Mexico. Populations of invasive species can expand rapidly because there are often no natural predators in the new habitat to check their growth. Such blooms would not necessarily reflect overfishing or other environmental problems.
Increased nutrients, ascribed to agricultural runoff, have also been cited as an antecedent to the proliferation of jellyfish. Monty Graham, of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama, says that "ecosystems in which there are high levels of nutrients ... provide nourishment for the small organisms on which jellyfish feed. In waters where there is eutrophication, low oxygen levels often result, favoring jellyfish as they thrive in less oxygen-rich water than fish can tolerate. The fact that jellyfish are increasing is a symptom of something happening in the ecosystem."
By sampling sea life in a heavily fished region off the Namibian coast, total jellyfish biomass has overtaken that of fish, following intense fishing in the area in the last few decades.
Areas which have been seriously affected by jellyfish blooms include the northern Gulf of Mexico, about which, Graham states, "Moon jellies have formed a kind of gelatinous net that stretches from end to end across the gulf."
Life cycle
Jellyfish are usually either male or female (occasionally hermaphroditic specimens are found). In most cases, both release sperm and eggs into the surrounding water, where the (unprotected) eggs are fertilized and mature into new organisms. In a few species, the sperm swim into the female's mouth fertilizing the eggs within the female's body where they remain for the early stages of development. In moon jellies, the eggs lodge in pits on the oral arms, which form a temporary brood chamber for the developing planula larvae.
Most jellyfish undergo two distinct life history stages (body forms) during their life cycle. The first is the ''polypoid'' stage. After fertilization and initial growth, a larval form, called the ''planula'', develops. The planula is a small larva covered with cilia. It settles onto a firm surface and develops into a polyp. The polyp is generally a small stalk with a mouth surrounded by upward-facing tentacles like miniatures of the closely related anthozoan polyps (sea anemones and corals), also of the phylum Cnidaria. This polyp may be sessile, living on the bottom or on similar substrata such as floats or boat-bottoms, or it may be free-floating or attached to tiny bits of free-living plankton or rarely, fish or other invertebrates. Polyps may be solitary or colonial, and some bud asexually by various means, making more polyps. Most are very small, measured in millimeters.
After a growth interval, the polyp begins reproducing asexually by budding and, in the Scyphozoa, is called a ''segmenting polyp'', or a scyphistoma. New scyphistomae may be produced by budding or new, immature jellies called ''ephyrae'' may be formed. A few jellyfish species can produce new medusae by budding directly from the medusan stage. Budding sites vary by species; from the tentacle bulbs, the manubrium (above the mouth), or the gonads of hydromedusae. A few of species of hydromedusae reproduce by ''fission'' (splitting in half).
In the second stage, the tiny polyps asexually produce jellyfish, each of which is also known as a ''medusa.'' Tiny jellyfish (usually only a millimeter or two across) swim away from the polyp and then grow and feed in the plankton. Medusae have a radially symmetric, umbrella-shaped body called a ''bell'', which is usually supplied with marginal tentacles - fringe-like protrusions from the bell's border that capture prey. A few species of jellyfish do not have the polyp portion of the life cycle, but go from jellyfish to the next generation of jellyfish through direct development of fertilized eggs.
Other species of jellyfish are among the most common and important jellyfish predators, some of which specialize in jellies. Other predators include tuna, shark, swordfish, sea turtles and at least one species of Pacific salmon. Sea birds sometimes pick symbiotic crustaceans from the jellyfish bells near the sea's surface, inevitably feeding also on the jellyfish hosts of these amphipods or young crabs and shrimp.
Jellyfish lifespans typically range from a few hours (in the case of some very small hydromedusae) to several months. Life span and maximum size varies by species. One unusual species is reported to live as long as 30 years. Another species, ''Turritopsis dohrnii as T. nutricula'', may be effectively immortal because of its ability to transform between medusa and polyp, thereby escaping death. Most large coastal jellyfish live 2 to 6 months, during which they grow from a millimeter or two to many centimeters in diameter. They feed continuously and grow to adult size fairly rapidly. After reaching adult size, jellyfish spawn daily if there is enough food. In most species, spawning is controlled by light, so the entire population spawns at about the same time of day, often at either dusk or dawn.
Relationship to humans
Culinary
Only scyphozoan jellyfish belonging to the
order Rhizostomeae are harvested for food; about 12 of the approximately 85 species are harvested and sold on international markets. Most of the harvest takes place in southeast Asia. Rhizostomes, especially ''
Rhopilema esculentum'' in China ( ''hǎizhē'', "sea stings") and ''
Stomolophus meleagris'' (cannonball jellyfish) in the United States, are favored because of their larger and more rigid bodies and because their toxins are harmless to humans.
Traditional processing methods, carried out by a Jellyfish Master, involve a 20 to 40 day multi-phase procedure in which after removing the gonads and mucous membranes, the umbrella and oral arms are treated with a mixture of table salt and alum, and compressed. Processing reduces liquefaction, off-odors and the growth of spoilage organisms, and makes the jellyfish drier and more acidic, producing a "crunchy and crispy texture." Jellyfish prepared this way retain 7-10% of their original weight, and the processed product contains approximately 94% water and 6% protein. Freshly processed jellyfish has a white, creamy color and turns yellow or brown during prolonged storage.
In China, processed jellyfish are desalted by soaking in water overnight and eaten cooked or raw. The dish is often served shredded with a dressing of oil, soy sauce, vinegar and sugar, or as a salad with vegetables. In Japan, cured jellyfish are rinsed, cut into strips and served with vinegar as an appetizer. Desalted, ready-to-eat products are also available.
Fisheries have begun harvesting the American cannonball jellyfish, S''tomolophus meleagris'', along the southern Atlantic coast of the United States and in the Gulf of Mexico for export to Asia.
In biotechnology
In 1961,
Osamu Shimomura of Princeton University extracted
green fluorescent protein (GFP) and another bioluminescent protein, called
aequorin, from the large and abundant hydromedusa ''
Aequorea victoria'', while studying photoproteins that cause
bioluminescence by this species of jellyfish. Three decades later,
Douglas Prasher, a post-doctoral scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, sequenced and cloned the gene for GFP.
Martin Chalfie of Columbia University soon figured out how to use GFP as a fluorescent marker of genes inserted into other cells or organisms.
Roger Tsien of University of California, San Diego, later chemically manipulated GFP in order to get other colors of fluorescence to use as markers. In 2008, Shimomura, Chalfie, and Tsien won the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their work with GFP.
Man-made GFP is now commonly used as a fluorescent tag to show which cells or tissues express specific genes. The genetic engineering technique fuses the gene of interest to the GFP gene. The fused DNA is then put into a cell, to generate either a cell line or (via IVF techniques) an entire animal bearing the gene. In the cell or animal, the artificial gene turns on in the same tissues and the same time as the normal gene. But instead of making the normal protein, the gene makes GFP. One can then find out what tissues express that protein—or at what stage of development—by shining light on the animal or cell and observing fluorescence. The fluorescence shows where the gene is expressed.
Jellyfish are also harvested for their collagen, which can be used for a variety of applications including the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis.
In captivity
Jellyfish are displayed in aquariums in many countries. Often the tank's background is blue and the animals are illuminated by side light, increasing the contrast between the animal and the background. In natural conditions, many jellies are so transparent that they are nearly invisible.
Jellyfish are not adapted to closed spaces. They depend on currents to transport them from place to place. Professional exhibits feature precise water flows, typically in circular tanks to prevent specimens from becoming trapped in corners. The Monterey Bay Aquarium uses a modified version of the ''kreisel'' (German for "spinning top") for this purpose. Jellyfish are becoming a popular trend in home aquaria. It is now possible to buy jellyfish aquaria and live jellyfish online. It is also possible to assemble a jellyfish aquarium for personal use.
Toxicity
All jellyfish sting their prey using
nematocysts, also called cnidocysts, stinging structures located in specialized cells called
cnidocytes, which are characteristic of all
Cnidaria. Contact with a jellyfish tentacle can trigger millions of nematocysts to pierce the skin and inject venom, yet only some species have a sting that will cause an adverse reaction in humans. When a nematocyst is triggered by contact by predator or prey, pressure builds up rapidly inside it up to 2,000 lbs/sq. inch until it bursts open. A lance inside the nematocyst pierces the victim's skin, and poison flows through into the victim. Touching or being touched by a jellyfish can be very uncomfortable, sometimes requiring medical assistance; sting effects range from no effect to extreme pain or even death. Because of the wide variation in response to jellyfish stings, it is wisest not to contact any jellyfish with bare skin. Even beached and dying jellyfish can still sting when touched.
Scyphozoan jellyfish stings range from a twinge to tingling to savage agony. Most jellyfish stings are not deadly, but stings of some species of the class ''Cubozoa'' and the Box jellyfish, such as the famous and especially toxic Irukandji jellyfish, can be deadly. Stings may cause anaphylaxis, which can be fatal. Medical care may include administration of an antivenom.
In 2010 at a New Hampshire beach, pieces of a single dead lion's mane jellyfish stung between 125 and 150 people. Jellyfish kill 20 to 40 people a year in the Philippines alone. In 2006 the Spanish Red Cross treated 19,000 stung swimmers along the Costa Brava.
Treatment
The three goals of first aid for uncomplicated jellyfish stings are to prevent injury to rescuers, deactivate the
nematocysts, and remove tentacles attached to the patient. Rescuers need to wear barrier clothing, such as
pantyhose, wet suits or full-body sting-proof suits. Deactivating the nematocysts (stinging cells) prevents further injection of
venom.
Vinegar (3 to 10% aqueous
acetic acid) is a common remedy to help with
box jellyfish stings, but not the stings of the
Portuguese Man o' War (which is not a true jellyfish, but a colony). For stings on or around the eyes, a towel dampened with vinegar is used to dab around the eyes, with care taken to avoid the eyeballs. Salt water is also used if vinegar is unavailable. Fresh water is not used if the sting occurs in salt water, as changes in
tonicity can release additional venom. Rubbing wounds, or using
alcohol, spirits,
ammonia, or
urine may have strongly negative effects as these can also encourage the release of venom.
Clearing the area of jelly, tentacles, and wetness further reduces nematocyst firing. Scraping the affected skin with a knife edge, safety razor, or credit card can remove remaining nematocysts.
Beyond initial first aid, antihistamines such as diphenhydramine (Benadryl) can control skin irritation (pruritus). For removal of venom in the skin, a paste of baking soda and water can be applied with a cloth covering on the sting. In some cases it is necessary to reapply paste every 15–20 minutes. Ice or fresh water should not be applied to the sting, as this may help the nematocysts to continue releasing their toxin.
Overpopulation
Evidence in recent years suggest that the population of jellyfish has swelled as a result of overfishing which reduces the number of predatory organisms that feed on them. This has allowed jellyfish to proliferate to the extent that they adversely affect humanity by interfering with public systems and harming swimmers. Jellyfish blooms cause problems for mankind. The most obvious are stings to humans (sometimes deadly), and causing coastal tourism to decline. Other problems are destroying fish nets, poisoning or crushing captured fish, and consuming fish eggs and young fish.
By clogging cooling equipment in mass, jellyfish have disabled power plants in several countries, including a cascading blackout in the Philippines in 1999 as well as in the Diablo Canyon Power Plant in California in 2010. Clogging also causes many problems including stoppage of nuclear power plants and desalination plants, as well as clogging engines of ships and making pull in of fishing nets hazardous.
In media
New discoveries about jellyfish and their prevalence are reflected on television in programs such as in "Jellyfish Invasion," which is an episode of the
National Geographic Channel documentary series ''
Explorer'', which includes research conducted by scientists in
Australia,
Hawaii and
Japan.
The Disney Pixar animated film ''Finding Nemo'' shows the near fatal effects of swimming through a jellyfish bloom. The opening sequence of the animated film ''Ponyo'' depicts a massive jellyfish bloom off the coast of Japan.
The Japanese science fiction film ''Dogora'' features jellyfish-like space creatures.
The Japanese anime ''Kuragehime'' features a main character who is obsessed with jellyfish, and has jellyfish related plotlines.
In the Will Smith movie ''Seven Pounds'', Will Smith's character had a pet jellyfish which was an important piece to the end of the movie.
On an episode of ''Survivor Palau'', the team winning the reward challenge got to swim in Jellyfish Lake, a lake full of golden jellyfish, which are harmless to Humans..
On the "A Star is Born Again" episode of ''The Simpsons'', the fictional town of Springfield holds a Jellyfish Festival, portrayed as a magical evening celebrating the waters and beach being overrun with jellyfish.
Taxonomy
Taxonomic classification systematics within the Cnidaria, as with all organisms, are always in flux. Many scientists who work on relationships between these groups are reluctant to assign ranks, although there is general agreement on the different groups, regardless of their absolute rank. Presented here is one scheme, which includes all groups that produce medusae (jellyfish), derived from several expert sources:
Jellyfish taxonomy (phylum Cnidaria: subphylum Medusozoa)
|
Class
|
Subclass
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Order
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Suborder
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! Families
|
|
|
|
Filifera
|
''see ''
|
|
''see''
|
|
|
''see''
|
Proboscoida
|
''see''
|
|
Physonectae
|
''Agalmatidae, Apolemiidae, Erennidae, Forskaliidae, Physophoridae, Pyrostephidae, Rhodaliidae''
|
Calycophorae
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''Abylidae, Clausophyidae, Diphyidae, Hippopodiidae, Prayidae, Sphaeronectidae''
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Cystonectae
|
''Physaliidae, Rhizophysidaev
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|
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''Olindiidae, Monobrachiidae, Microhydrulidae, Armorhydridae''
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''Geryoniidae, Halicreatidae, Petasidae, Ptychogastriidae, Rhopalonematidae''
|
|
''Cuninidae, Solmarisidae, Aeginidae, Tetraplatiidae''
|
|
''Halammohydridae, Otohydridae''
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|
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''Lucernariidae, Kishinouyeidae, Lipkeidae, Kyopodiidae''
|
|
''Depastridae, Thaumatoscyphidae, Craterolophinae''
|
|
''Carybdeidae, Alatinidae, Tamoyidae, Chirodropidae, Chiropsalmidae''
|
|
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''Atollidae, Atorellidae, Linuchidae, Nausithoidae, Paraphyllinidae, Periphyllidae''
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|
''Cyaneidae, Pelagiidae, Ulmaridae''
|
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''Cassiopeidae, Catostylidae, Cepheidae, Lychnorhizidae, Lobonematidae, Mastigiidae, Rhizostomatidae, Stomolophidae''
|
Largest jellyfish
The lion's mane jellyfish, ''Cyanea capillata'', have long been cited as the largest known jellyfish, and are arguably the longest animal in the world, with fine, thread-like tentacles up to 36.5 m (120 feet) long (though most are nowhere near that large). They have a painful, but rarely fatal, sting.
The increasingly common giant Nomura's jellyfish, ''Nemopilema nomurai'', found some, but not all years in the waters of Japan, Korea and China in summer and autumn is probably a much better candidate for "largest jellyfish", since the largest Nomura's jellyfish in late autumn can reach 200 cm (79 inches) in bell (body) diameter and about 200 kg (440 lbs) in weight, with average specimens frequently reaching 90 cm (35 inches) in bell diameter and about 150 kg (330 lbs) in weight. The large bell mass of the giant Nomura's jellyfish can dwarf a diver and is nearly always much greater than the up-to-100 cm bell diameter Lion's Mane.
The rarely-encountered deep-sea jellyfish ''Stygiomedusa gigantea'' is another solid candidate for "largest jellyfish", with its 100 cm wide, and thick, massive bell and four thick, "paddle-like" oral arms extending up to 600 cm in length, very different than the typical fine, threadlike tentacles that rim the umbrella of more-typical-looking jellyfish, including the Lion's Mane.
Gallery
See also
References
External links
Explore Jellyfish - Smithsonian Ocean Portal
Jellyfish and Other Gelatinous Zooplankton
Jellyfish Facts - Information on Jellyfish and Jellyfish Safety
Cotylorhiza tuberculata
"There's no such thing as a jellyfish" from The MBARI YouTube channel
Photos:
Jellyfish Exhibition At National Aquarium, Baltimore, Maryland (USA) - Photo Gallery
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