Claim: Global Warming will cause a deadly Jellyfish Invasion

Box jellyfish warning signpost at a Cape Tribulation beach in Queensland, Australia

It is claimed that climate change will cause deadly Irukandji and Box Jellyfish to invade Sydney Harbour – data shows otherwise

Story submitted by Eric Worrall

The Daily Telegraph warns that deadly Box Jellyfish and Irukandji jellyfish will invade the popular beaches of Sydney Harbour, if we don’t mend our wicked climate ways.

According to the article, which reads like a “B” grade horror movie, Macquarie University’s Professor Rob Harcourt claims that warmer currents are enabling more deadly tropical species to survive further south. 

“Every year scientists from Sydney Institute of Marine Science are taking a tally of new visitors to Sydney waters,’’ he said. “Like Nemo and his friends, the turtle ‘dudes’, lots of tropical animals travel down the east coast each year being swept along in the East Australian Current (EAC).”

Box jellyfish have been blamed for 64 deaths (ever) while the tiny irukandji jellyfish killed two people in north Queensland in 2002.

As someone who regularly swims in the Coral Sea, one of the places where these nasties live, I would like to point out that the risk of being killed by a Box Jellyfish or Irukandji is somewhat less than the risk of being killed in a car accident, or the risk of being struck by lightning.

But a story about killer jellyfish probably sells more newspapers, than a story about yet another irresponsible drunk.

==============================================================

UPDATE: (by Anthony)

A check of the range for the Box Jellyfish shows it nowhere close to Sydney:

boxjellyfish_range

Source of base map: http://oceana.org/en/explore/marine-wildlife/box-jellyfish

The distance to the most southern point in the range from about North of Townsville (near the Cape Tribulation warning sign at the head of this post) to Sydney is over 1000 miles. It seems the claim of migration is more than a bit of a stretch.

Here is a plot of the average water temperature of Bondi Beach in Sydney:

Bondi-Beach[1]

Source: http://www.surf-forecast.com/breaks/Bondi-Beach/seatemp

Note the extreme barely breaks 25°C (77F)

And the science says otherwise. From Stingeradvisor.com

 

Box jelly and Irukandji jellyfishes are generally reported at water temperatures above 26°C.

In laboratory conditions, 1-2° warming results in stressed animals that do not recover; animals generally deteriorate rapidly and expire if not maintained in cool water.

Cooler water retains more dissolved oxygen, allowing animals to absorb it with less energy expenditure; cubozoans, with a higher metabolism than most other jellyfishes, and thus higher oxygen demand, probably have a narrow range of tolerance and low adaptational potential. Although the jellyfish are able to swim well, and thus navigate in and out of variable local conditions, the populations are nonetheless tied to regions where their polyps can survive; cubozoan species and populations typically have extremely narrow distributions, suggesting that they are unlikely to adapt easily to alternative habitats if conditions were to become intolerable.

 

Summary of published conclusions: Most authors have concluded that the jellyfish situation is likely to worsen in coming years, as human activities continue to impact on marine environments and other species are affected, opening up niches for jellyfish.

 

BOTTOM LINE: It seems likely that non-thermal perturbations are likely to result in increased jellyfish numbers, whereas thermal perturbations are likely to have detrimental effects on box jellyfish and Irukandji populations

 

 

 

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tango
August 8, 2014 11:13 am

what a load of BS

Pete of Perth
August 8, 2014 11:27 am

Not to worry, the crocs eat the sharks that eat the jellys. It is easier to see a croc than a jelly, problem solved.

DD More
August 8, 2014 11:59 am

kcrucible says: August 8, 2014 at 10:09 am
“But a story about killer jellyfish probably sells more newspapers, than a story about yet another irresponsible drunk.”
But not if they can tie it to a Russian Heatwave –
Russian deaths mount as heatwave and vodka mix
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-10646106

brians356
August 8, 2014 11:59 am

Hey, I’ve been stung by a jellyfish in Sydney! Where do I apply for climate refugee status?
(Alas, it was only a common bluebottle jellyfish, so I can only hope for temporary status.)

wws
August 8, 2014 12:07 pm

Syfy already did the “Sharktopus” movie.

A C Osborn
August 8, 2014 12:17 pm

Mike Smith says: August 8, 2014 at 11:10 am
Love it.
Spineless lot.

AndyG55
August 8, 2014 12:20 pm

I’m in Newcastle, about 150km north of Sydney.
If anyone thinks that the water around here is any warmer than it was 30-40 years ago, they are fooling themselves !!

August 8, 2014 12:22 pm

This year on the north side of Solway Firth there have been far fewer jellyfish than during the last three years.
If you would like to send me some money, well, lots of money, I am sure I can blame this change on anything you would like me to blame it on.

Alx
August 8, 2014 12:28 pm

A consensus of scientists agree that global warming will attract hostile alien invaders, who will find the earths warming termperature and high CO2 concentration at an uncertain point in the certain future, perfect for their needs.
Act now or face certain invasion! Act now!
Well that was my pitch for the next climate fear inducing science fiction B movie, but maybe I’ll go with the jelly fish…

August 8, 2014 12:38 pm

Climate alarmists are a far bigger threat to humanity, than jellyfish!

August 8, 2014 12:42 pm

Congratulations, Eric on a good article.
Do you have a graph of the summer temperatures at Bondi Beach over a period of years or preferably decades?

Don
August 8, 2014 1:24 pm

GLOBAL WARMING…Is there anything it can’t do?

johnbuk
August 8, 2014 1:50 pm

Wait till they start coming out of the water and taking people’s jobs and land – then you’ll all be sorry. I’m off inland, how high can these things climb?

Frank
August 8, 2014 3:11 pm

OldSeaDog says: “This year on the north side of Solway Firth there have been far fewer jellyfish than during the last three years.”
Well, there you have another extreme event–“Solway.Min_Jellyfish”. Climate Change has probably produced the lowest jellyfish count there in millennia! Just goes to show.

John M
August 8, 2014 3:35 pm

The Bondi beach temperature is misleading as it is a local reading near the shore, influenced by the midday sun and water passing over warmer sand. If you measure the temperature just off the coast it will barely exceed 22 degrees C in summer.

mojo
August 8, 2014 4:22 pm

And if they do invade, what does he propose doing about it? Scoop them up? Is he aware of how jellyfish reproduce?

Leigh
August 8, 2014 4:58 pm

The story is just another shovel full on the ever growing pile.
But I am extremely disappointed that lake Hume in southern NSW was left out of this latest scare.
We could do with the free tourism advertising.
Maybe we could put out a story about our ” lochness type monster” thats been in the lake for thousands of years.

JamesS
August 8, 2014 5:41 pm

Oz is a damn B-movie nightmare of creatures to begin with. Start with the poison spur of the male platypus, add in the Sydney Funnel Web spider, and then toss in the deadly jellies the size of your little fingernail that can slip through a half-inch fishnet and kill you right on the beach, and what’s left for the imagination?
Oh yeah, they don’t have Monolith Monsters. That we know of.

ferdberple
August 8, 2014 5:52 pm

the range of the box jellyfish matches the range of mangrove swamps. nothing to do with global warming.

tumpy
August 8, 2014 6:58 pm

Sorry but i have to point out the range is much larger than that, we get them occasionally at beaches in christchurchnew zealand and the water is never 26 degrees. They also turn up on the gold coast and down to sydney, as their air sacs allow the box jelly fish or blue bottles as we refer to them to be blown along by the wind so they can often be blown much further south with the right weather conditions. I have no data, only personnel experiance!

August 8, 2014 9:42 pm

tumpy:
You’re partly right but mostly wrong. Box jellyfish and irrukandji do indeed extend further down the Queensland coast (a child died from box jellyfish sting at Gladstone many years ago), and irrukandji are tiny and only recently discovered so findings further south as far as Fraser Island and possibly the Gold Coast are to be expected. But box jellyfish are nothing like blue bottles or any other sort of jelly fish.. They are not blown by wind but move by swimming, so they prefer calm still water when they move close to shore to catch tiny fish, which is when humans come into contact with them. They can have a body as big as a large letter box and have tentacles several metres long. Another difference: they don’t just give a painful sting, they are deadly if the stung area is large enough. You’ll know about if you get hit. Just don’t expect them in Sydney anytime soon. For a start, they don’t like surf.

JCR
August 8, 2014 10:52 pm

tumpy
I agree in principle, but have to agree with Ken Stewart. Box jellyfish (Chironex fleckeri) don’t have that big a body, esp when compared with bluebottles, which can be huge. Irukandji are even smaller. I grew up in Mackay, in North Queensland. While I was at high school, a little girl was killed by a box jellyfish at Black’s Beach nr Mackay. A local doctor reckoned that if he had been standing at the surfline with a loaded syringe of anti-venine in his hand, he wouldn’t have been able to save her. That poor little girl must have died an horrific, painful death. BUT it was also an astronomically rare event. For the CAGW alarmists to beat up the spread of jellyfish deaths as though it was common and inevitable is hugely insulting and disgusting.

August 8, 2014 11:30 pm

They will be dancing the Jelly Roll Blues in Sydney once again.

GregK
August 9, 2014 1:56 am

Tumpy ,
Blue bottles aren’t box jellyfish.
Box jellyfish, including irukandji, are colourless and are generally restricted to northern Australia and the seas of South-East Asia.
Bluebottle jellyfish [aka Portuguese Man o’ War] occur throughout the tropics and warm temperate zones of the world. They are propelled by a gas bladder that acts as a sail.
A sting from a bluebottle is painful but not fatal. Many people are stung on surf beaches when bluebottles drift close to shore and are broken up in the waves.
Not all box jellyfish are deadly but Chironex fleckeri, also known as the sea wasp, has 24 eyes, 4 brains, 60 anal regions [?] and enough venom to kill 60 people.
People who swim in waters where they occur are advised to wear stinger suits. Before the suits were developed lifesavers wore panty hose to protect themselves.
Most southern Australians hope these little blighters stay up north.

AndyG55
August 9, 2014 2:37 am

Leigh says:
Maybe we could put out a story about our ” lochness type monster” thats been in the lake for thousands of years.
Umm, Leigh.. I’m not sure they built concrete dams that long ago,
….almost certainly not in Australia ! 🙂