Jakarta Globe – AFP, February 6, 2014
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| An undated handout photo received on Feb. 6, 2014 shows a 1.5-meter new species of giant jellyfish that washed up on a beach near Hobart near Tasmania. (AFP Photo/Josie Lim) |
Sydney.
Scientists were Thursday working to classify a new species of giant jellyfish
that washed up on an Australian beach, describing it as a “whopper” that took
their breath away.
The
1.5-meter specimen was found by a family in the southern state of Tasmania, who
contacted a local marine biologist.
Lisa Gershwin,
a scientist with the government’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial
Research Organization (CSIRO), said the type of jellyfish had been seen in the
past, but never one so big and not one that became beached.
“We know
about this specimen but it hasn’t been classified yet, it hasn’t been named,”
she told AFP, adding that there had been a massive jellyfish bloom in Tasmanian
waters over the past month.
She said
the new species was related to the lion’s mane jellyfish, the largest known
species of the marine animal in the world.
“It is so
big it took our breath away,” added Gershwin, who has been working with
jellyfish for 20 years.
“It’s a
whopper of an animal but it’s not life-threatening, although it does sting.”
CSIRO
scientists now have enough pictures and samples to begin a proper analysis to
classify and name the creature. Despite this, much remains unknown, including
how it eats and breeds, and its habitat.
“It’s so
big but we know nothing about it,” said Gershwin. “It highlights again how much
we still have to learn about the ocean.”
The
jellyfish was found by the Lim family on a beach south of the Tasmanian capital
Hobart with mother Josie saying “it blew our minds away.”
“It’s not
really jellyfish territory here and all we could do was stand back and admire
it,” she told AFP.
Agence France-Presse

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