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Unseasonably Early Arrival Of Jellyfish Along E. Coast Gets Attention Of Chesapeake Bay Scientists

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hatrack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jun-09-11 12:14 PM
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Unseasonably Early Arrival Of Jellyfish Along E. Coast Gets Attention Of Chesapeake Bay Scientists
First came hundreds of reports of jellyfish washing ashore in central Florida over the Memorial Day weekend. Since then, people have been spotting blooms of the gelatinous drifters off the coasts Connecticut, Virginia, and South Carolina, all earlier in the summer than expected.

The early appearance of jellyfish along the East Coast is more than just a nuisance for beachgoers. According to scientists, it’s a sign that coastal waters are warmer than usual for time of year, and recent studies suggest the early jellyfish blooms could upset the marine ecosystem in coastal areas, like Maryland's Chesapeake Bay.

“The key thing with jellies is that they do everything so much faster than everything else, they grow and reproduce and are voracious predators, that other animals like fish can’t keep up,” says ecologist Rob Condon from the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama.

For several years, Condon and colleagues from the Sea Lab and the Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) have been studying jellyfish that live in the York River, a southern tributary of Chesapeake Bay. They’ve discovered that rapidly-growing blooms of jellyfish are feeding on some of the most nutritious parts of the food web, including small crustaceans, and are converting them into products that sustain bacteria that leave little valuable energy supplies for fish and other sea life.

EDIT

http://www.climatecentral.org/news/changing-jellyfish-season-could-shift-fish-food-supply-in-chesapeake-bay/
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