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Swimmers Beware of Jellyfish

Jellyfish No bones. No brains. But what a sting!

The sting of some "jellies," such as this sea nettle (left), can be deadly. Others are harmless to humans.

They look like blobs when washed up on the beach. But in the water jellies are graceful. They range in size from about 1 inch (2 1/2 centimeters) to 200 feet (61 meters) long. They have been drifting through the world's oceans for more than 650 million years.

Jellyfish are not fish at all. They are invertebrates, relatives of corals and sea anemones (uh-NEH-muh-neez). A jelly has no head, brain, heart, eyes, nor ears. It has no bones, either. But that's no problem! To capture prey for food, jellies have a net of tentacles that contain poisonous, stinging cells. When the tentacles brush against prey (or, say, a person's leg), thousands of tiny stinging cells explode, launching barbed stingers and poison into the victim.

Where there's water—from icy polar seas to tropical Pacific shores—there are jellies. Scientists estimate there may be 2,000 species of jellyfish.

Don't Get Stung
A jellyfish fires its poison whenever its tentacles brush against an object. In humans, the poison usually causes a sharp, burning sensation that may last from minutes to hours.
1. Take note of jellyfish warning signs posted on the beach.
2. Be careful around jellies washed up on the sand. Some still sting if their tentacles are wet. Tentacles torn off a jelly can sting, too.
3. If you are stung, wash the wound with vinegar or rubbing alcohol. Or sprinkle meat tenderizer or put a baking soda and water paste on the sting. Don't rinse with water, which could release more poison.
4. Lifeguards usually give first aid for stings. See a doctor if you have an allergic reaction.
jellyfish
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World View

All jellies sting, but not all jellies have poison that hurts humans. Of the 2,000 species of jellyfish, only about 70 seriously harm or occasionally kill people.

Listed here are the more dangerous jellies and where you can find—and avoid—them.

Lion's mane
Atlantic Ocean from above the Arctic Circle to Florida; Gulf of Mexico; Pacific Ocean from Alaska to southern California

Portuguese man-of-war
Gulf of Mexico; Caribbean Sea near the Bahamas; West Indies

Sea nettle
Chesapeake Bay; Pacific Ocean from Alaska to southern California; Atlantic Ocean from Massachusetts to Florida; Gulf of Mexico

Sea wasp
Pacific Ocean near northern Australia, Philippines


Text by Susan Jaques
Photograph by Brian Parker / Tom Stack and Associates
Illustration by Norman Kekki



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