Australian Marine Stinger
Advisory Services, and the author of "Stung! On Jellyfish Blooms and the Future of the Ocean"
"Ouch!" is what most of us think when we think of jellyfish. They sting. They're
slimy and they have no brains. So who would've predicted that the lowly
jellyfish could emerge from the shadows as a destroyer of fisheries and
ecosystems and even as a threat to penguins and whales.
Far down in Antarctica -- the
last pristine wilderness, some might say -- the balance is shifting from krill
to jellyfish. In this harsh land, just about everything bigger than a krill eats
krill: whales, seabirds, fish and penguins.
But krill are disappearing,
thanks to us and the jellyfish. We fish out vast amounts of krill for our
omega-3 supplements; the jellyfish eat vast quantities of plankton, leaving
little for the krill to eat.
All over the world, from the
Bering Sea to the Sea of Japan, from the Mediterranean to the Gulf of Mexico,
from China to the Chesapeake, from the Black Sea to the Baltic to the Benguela
off Namibia, any place oceans are in trouble, jellyfish are taking over.
Jellyfish do well in warmer waters. Our carbon dioxide emissions are both
warming the water and causing it to become corrosive. Warmer water -- even a
fraction of a degree -- holds less oxygen than cooler water and shifts the
balance of who survives and who perishes.
A strange type of jellyfish-like
creature called a salp is particularly taking advantage. Salps are surely one of
the world's most bizarre critters. They can grow 10% of their body length per
hour and go through two generations in a day. They are more closely related to
humans than to most other types of jellyfish, though they certainly don't look
like it. Their bodies look like clear, gelatinous barrels. Salps don't sting,
but they do their damage in their staggering numbers. Ask the operators of
Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant on the coast of central California.
In April 2012, Diablo was plunged
into emergency shutdown because of salps clogging up the seawater intake pipes
for the cooling system. This might seem freakish, but jellyfish have caused many
dozens of such shutdowns at nuclear power plants, coal-fired power plants,
desalination plants -- pretty much any type of industry that draws seawater.
Even seawater-cooled data centers such as Google's Finnish facility are at
risk.
Different types of jellyfish have
caused mass fish kills at salmon farms all over the world. Ireland, Scotland,
Chile, Australia, New Zealand... you name it. If salmon are being farmed, you
can bet there are terrible jellyfish problems.
Jellyfish have also taken over
Lurefjorden, one of Norway's beautiful fjords and previously one of its best
fishing spots. There is nary a fish to be found. Recently, two more fjords have
also become colonized by jellyfish as their fisheries have declined.
The stings and emergency
shutdowns are bad -- and let's face it, that whole slimy thing is a bit
off-putting -- but the real problem with jellyfish is in their predator-prey
dynamic with fish. On the face of it, fish are obviously the superior predator:
They are smarter, faster and often bigger. Think of sharks and stingrays and
largemouth bass: It's hard to imagine that jellyfish could
possibly hold their own against these fighters. But jellyfish are sneaky. They
eat the eggs and larvae of fish, and the plankton that the larvae would eat. And
through this double whammy of predation and competition, they can cripple an
ecosystem at the ankles.
But jellyfish do other harm,
which is only just beginning to be appreciated. They flip the food chain upside
down. Normally as you go up the food chain, the energy value increases. For
example, shrimp pack more energy than their plankton prey, but big fish that eat
shrimp are better still. Hower, jellyfish, a very low-energy choice compared
with shrimp or fish, are sequestering the higher energy of these species into
their own low-energy bodies. They are, in essence, spinning gold into straw, or
turning wine into water.
In a healthy ecosystem, fish are
superior competitors and predators over jellyfish. But the things we humans do
-- we fish, we pollute, we dam, we build, we translocate -- are making life
harder for fish and better for jellyfish. And so, as we look around the world,
we see that many of the most heavily disturbed ecosystems have "flipped" to
being dominated by jellyfish instead of fish. Moon jellies and comb jellies in
the Inland Sea of Japan. Sea nettles in the Chesapeake and the Benguela current
off Namibia. Comb jellies in the seas of Europe. Santa's hat jellies in the
fjords of Norway. Refrigerator-sized jellies growing in the seas of China and
drifting into Japanese and Korean waters.
And once in control, they don't
seem to be letting go.
So, we find ourselves in the
unimaginable position of being in competition with jellyfish -- and make no
mistake, they have the home-court advantage.
So, what can we do? What should
we do? That's the problem. The ocean is our life support system -- it's where we
get our food, our oxygen, many of our industries and often our inspiration. But
we don't have a solution for the damages we are causing. We need to buy time, so
solutions can be innovated.
We need to invest in research to
slow down the damage as well as to cope with our rapidly changing world. And we
need to begin serious dialogue about what we value and what we are willing to do
to preserve it.
We could start by legislating a
clean-to-intake standard in which any air or water discharged by industry must
be at least as clean as it was going in, or the industry is not permitted to
operate. Sure, there would be great gnashing of teeth, but quite quickly,
polluting industries would have to innovate ways to be cleaner to stay
economically viable. This is just one example, but we must think of many more.
And we must do something.
I read somewhere recently that
we in all likelihood will go down in history as the generation that could have
saved the ocean but chose not to. It made me cry, because I fear it is true.
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