Community Corner

Clinging Jellyfish Monitored At Jersey Shore: See Where They Are

If you like to wade in the bay, the rivers or lagoons, see where in 2021 biologists have found the creatures that pack a potent sting.

Clinging jellyfish, which pack a potent, painful sting, are hard to see. Here's where the state Department of Environmental Protection and biologists from Montclair State University have found them this year.
Clinging jellyfish, which pack a potent, painful sting, are hard to see. Here's where the state Department of Environmental Protection and biologists from Montclair State University have found them this year. (New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection)

BARNEGAT BAY, NJ — Wading in Barnegat Bay or in the river mouths and lagoons at the Jersey Shore brings with it some risks, including clinging jellyfish.

The non-native species, which was first confirmed in New Jersey in 2016, delivers a powerful sting, and the presence of the jellyfish has been monitored since then by the state Department of Environmental Protection and by scientists at Montclair State University.

Monitoring in 2021 began in late May, but so far the number of clinging jellyfish found at the Shore, from the Shrewsbury River to the Forked River, has been low. A map maintained by the state DEP shows where clinging jellyfish have been confirmed and sites that have been investigated but no clinging jellyfish were found (click here).

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Of 25 sites where samples were taken, only two — both in the Metedeconk River — had more than 20 clinging jellyfish in the samples.

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Paul Bologna, a biology professor and the director of the Marine Biology and Coastal Sciences Program at Montclair State University, has been researching and monitoring the jellyfish.

On the New Jersey Jellyspotters Facebook page, which is devoted to jellyfish and sea creatures, Bologna urged page followers to post information and report sightings of the jellyfish.

"If you see something like the clinging jellyfish, please be very careful," Bologna said. "We wear rubber gloves so we don't get stung, and so should you. If you see some, please let us know (time, place, date) and we will try to verify and possible sample that area to confirm."

The clinging jellyfish, a native of the Pacific Ocean, is small and very difficult to spot in the water. They range from the size of a dime to about the size of a quarter and have a distinctive red, orange or violet cross across their middle.

Both the adult, or medusa, and polyp stages of the clinging jellyfish are capable of stinging, a mechanism the species uses to stun prey and to defend against predators. Each jellyfish can trail 60 to 90 tentacles that uncoil like sharp threads and emit painful neurotoxins. Tentacles grow to be about 3 inches long, and they primarily feed on zooplankton.

They are not known to inhabit ocean beaches or other sandy areas but tend to attach to submerged aquatic vegetation and algae in back bays and estuaries. Anyone wading through these areas, especially near aquatic vegetation, should take precautions, such as wearing boots or waders to protect themselves. Swimming at lifeguarded beaches is always encouraged.

A sting can produce severe pain and other localized symptoms and can result in hospitalization in some individuals. There is no method to effectively control clinging jellyfish populations in the aquatic environment.

Sea nettles, another type of jellyfish with a less powerful sting, are common in Barnegat Bay but are much larger. They prey on clinging jellyfish.

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