A good year for jellyfish population
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Jenny Marder
Jellyfish are swarming Surf City’s coastal waters this summer and
stinging more swimmers than lifeguards can remember them doing.
City lifeguards, who treated 12 jellyfish stings all last summer,
have already treated 399 jellyfish injuries since June 1.
It is one of the highest counts Marine Safety Lt. Mike Baumgartner
has seen in his 22 years at the city beach.
The number of stings is partly a result of the increased activity
at the beaches, he said.
“We’ve had more people here, the water’s warmer and people stay in
the water for a longer period of time,” he said, adding that the rise
and fall in the number of the gelatinous fish is simply “a phenomenon
that happens over time.”
Cory Tague, who supervises lifeguard towers at the Huntington
State Beach, also said that in his 11 years of work at the state
beach, he’s never seen so many jellyfish stings. He can’t remember
any jellyfish incidents at all during his first five years as a
lifeguard.
“This year, we have vinegar at every single tower because of it.”
he said.
Jellyfish are attracted to warm water, and are found along the
coast whenever temperatures rise, Tague said.
They may look like shrunken blobs when washed up on the sand, but
in the water, jellyfish are graceful sea creatures.
Jellyfish have soft bodies and long, poisonous tentacles that
release a venom used to catch fish. The poison, which is sent out
through stinging cells called nematocysts, can be unleashed upon any
object that brushes against the creature, including a human limb.
Touching a jellyfish causes a burning sensation that can last minutes
or several hours.
The kind most commonly spotted in Surf City waters are parachute
shaped and opaque in color, with purple veins and the consistency of
jelly. They are between six and 10 inches in size and are made up of
99% water.
Although the sting of some jellyfish, such as the box jelly and
the Irukandji jelly, can be deadly, the kind found in Huntington
waters is not dangerous, and no major injuries have been reported at
the beaches.
“There is usually some minor irritation and redness that goes away
within a couple of hours,” Baumgartner said.
To treat stings, lifeguards simply spray the injured area with
vinegar and water, a remedy that breaks down the nematocyst cells.
Although people have been known to have severe allergic reactions to
jellyfish, none have been recorded at either the city or the state
beach this summer.
“People show us their red welts, we squirt them, and that’s it,”
Tague said.
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