• The Environment

    Jellyfish Invasion

    By Posted on 6.4.2008 17 Comments

    For most of us, jellyfish are nothing more than a nuisance. They drift toward beach shores and into our consciousness each summer near the end of their life cycle, making a refreshing dip in the water a bit less carefree for a few weeks. But that may be changing. Last November, a 10-mile-wide and 42-foot-thick swarm of baby mauve stingers (Pelagia noctiluca) decimated Northern Ireland’s farmed-salmon population. Overnight,120,000 fish were reduced to a floating mass of carcasses by billions of the small jellies native to warmer waters thousands of miles to the south. The salmon, which were killed by stings and oxygen deprivation, had a market value of $2 million.

    6.7.2008 at 11:02pm - Comment by zedkitty

    KND 123 What is wrong with you?! You have other problems that you need to address having nothing to do with the quality of Darkfx's text. Lock yourself in a room with some self help books until you are able to say "I really like myself and have no need to belittle others to stoke my fragile self-esteem" To paraphrase Morissey "....it's so easy to laugh/ so easy to hate/ it takes strength to be gentle and kind..." On jellies...strictures on bilge water and trawling will go a long way in correcting the imbalance that has allowed them to flourish.



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