Jellyfish population on the rise in Sound
Increase could have bad effect on food chain
BREMERTON – Pulsating gelatinous sea creatures, which float through the water like alien life-forms, appear to be on the increase in portions of Puget Sound.
Jellyfish are not welcomed by most biologists, who have learned that these translucent creatures tend to show up when the ecosystem is troubled. They’ll take a bite out of the lower portion of the food web, gobbling up plankton that could otherwise feed herring and other forage fish – which, in turn, are important prey for salmon, birds and marine mammals.
Casey Rice of NOAA’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center said there is a lot to learn about jellyfish, but one thing seems clear: When the number of jellyfish is high, the number of forage fish, such as herring, is low.
The cause and effect are not well understood. Some say humans have inadvertently invited the jellyfish into local waters by releasing excess nutrients from sewage into the water. The nutrients produce tons of algae, which feed larger plankton, which are eaten by jellyfish in competition with forage fish.
In some cases, overfishing has reduced forage fish, which leaves the food supply wide open for jellies. Ironically, jellyfish are caught in fishing nets, creating a major nuisance for fishermen.
Since they have few predators, jellyfish tend to stick around too long, maintaining their troublesome ways. They seem to survive better than fish in low-oxygen conditions. And when food supplies run low, they may out-survive fish by drifting about and using very little energy.
It is often said that jellyfish are an energetic “dead end” in the food web, since they eat many things but almost nothing eats them.
Jellyfish are among the most ancient multicellular organisms on Earth. Their multistage life cycle begins with a fertilized free-swimming larva that settles on a hard surface. The larva grows into a polyp with a short stalk and a mouth ringed by tentacles for constant feeding. Eventually, the polyp breaks away, floats around and develops into the pulsating medusa, the stage typically identified as a jellyfish.
Some experts believe that rock and concrete bulkheads, installed to prevent beach erosion, encourage jellyfish by providing good habitat on which polyps can grow and develop.
In South Puget Sound and Southern Hood Canal, where poor water conditions are marked by low oxygen and increased acidity, the greatest numbers of jellyfish have been found, according to a 2011 study headed by Correigh Greene, Rice’s associate at NOAA.
Questions remain about how humans might be encouraging jellyfish and whether short- and long-term climate variations may shift things in favor or against jellyfish versus forage fish.