Garibaldi and jellyfish

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alaity47

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Scuba Instructor
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Location
Glendale, CA
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My dive buddy and I saw something kind of funny at Catalina a few months ago. We came across a gigantic jellyfish (the bell was more than a foot across) - you can see a picture here.

We noticed a Garibaldi kind of sucking on one of the tentacles like a strand of spaghetti. I was wondering if anyone else has observed this behavior? Was the garibaldi trying to eat the jellyfish? Was it eating stuff that the jelly had killed and was stuck on its tentacles? And why wasn't the Garibaldi getting stung?

Whatever the case, it was darn funny-looking. :)
 
That was a Fried Egg Jelly and they have been showing up all over San Diego for the past few months too. Some of the ones I have encountered have had tentacles around 20 feet long. Really cool looking at night in a bright light.
 
Anastasia- SCUBACrazy was correct, that is indeed a fried egg jellyfish. I encountered one in the Casino Dive Park a while back and watched as a kelp bass swallowed a tentacle torn loose from the critter. While filming the jellyfish, I discovered that the sting is quite mild.

Here's a column on the fried egg jellyfish that I wrote as part of my "Dive Dry with Dr. Bill" series for one of Catalina's local papers (The Avalon Bay News):



DIVE DRY WITH DR. BILL: SUNNY-SIDE UP OR OVER EASY?

I rarely eat fried foods these days although as a high school swimmer I always cooked fried eggs for breakfast to go with my sausage and cereal (and Wheaties, of course... the breakfast of champions). Back then I could easily burn off 4,-6,000 calories. Today the closest I've come to one was a few weekends ago when a very large fried egg appeared above me while diving... a fried egg jellyfish.

Of course jellyfish are not fish any more than starfish are. They are cnidarians related to corals and sea anemones. This species is not common in waters, but recently there have been several sightings off Catalina and a number of them were seen in the San Diego area in 1990 and again this year as well. They have a scattered distribution world-wide and are found from Chile to Alaska and Japan in the Pacific Ocean. Normally they are a pelagic species, drifting in the open ocean. In fact despite their size (up to 24" across), they are considered plankton due to their limited ability to swim against prevailing currents.

The bell of this jellyfish has 16 clusters of up to 25 tentacles each which may be 10-20 feet long. As it pulses through the water, these undulating clusters create a image of grace and beauty. Like its relatives, the tentacles have stinging cells known as nematocysts. These cells release little harpoon-like stingers attached by a thin cord. When the stingers strike potential good, they can hold it until the tentacles bring it to the central mouth on the underside.

I wanted to get up close and personal to take some good video of the tentacles and in the process the tentacles got some good shots at me! However the stings were very mild compared to my expectations. I watched one tentacle, torn loose by the rocks on shore, drift close to a kelp bass which eyed it, then swallowed it with no apparent negative effects. I guess it liked its food a little on the "spicy" side!

The yellow "yolk" of this jellyfish is actually the reproductive structures or gonads. Given their large mass in the specimen I observed, it may have been in reproductive mode. When the adult jellyfish releases its gametes, they fertilize and become larval forms known as planulae. The bell and other body parts are clear to white or pale yellow.

So what does an open water jellyfish with only a mild sting feed on? Hard to imagine they could catch fish given the kelp bass' response to its sting. In fact small fish are occasionally seen swimming among its tentacles. Apparently they feed on other jelly-like plankton including jellyfish. Now when you consider that most jellies are 95% water, that doesn't sound like a substantial diet unless you're looking to lose a lot of weight! Hmmm, perhaps I should try it.

The fried egg jellyfish is actually a tiny "ecosystem" itself. Symbiotic amphipods and juvenile crabs often live on its body. However, I did not observe any of these on this jellyfish. I kept shooting this beautiful creature until the surge sucked it into a hole between the rocks of the breakwater. When it briefly emerged, it was a bit tattered from the experience. Before I could get more than a few seconds of additional footage, it was sucked back into the hole and didn't re-appear. I guess its back to coffee and a banana for breakfast now.


© 2003 Dr. Bill Bushing. Watch the "Dive Dry with Dr. Bill" underwater videos on Catalina Cable TV channel 49, 10:00 AM and 5:00 PM weekdays.
 
Thanks drbill! That's definitely it - it drove me nuts that in our invertebrates ID book it just said "Jellyfish" and didn't give a common name! :)

Definitely the coolest thing we've seen all year - although it statled the heck out of me when I first spotted it in the 10' murk out there! We were able to get right up next to it; it's a beautiful thing to watch close-up in its "flight."

It did make me glad for our thick CA wetsuits, though...
 
We call them Egg Yolk jellies, and they definitely do sting, but it wears off after about 15 min. One of my dives a month or so ago in Puget Sound was like an obstacle course, dodging these guys and their tentacles! They were EVERYWHERE!

You'll often see them snagged on Plumose anemones who are eating them.

DrBill, very cool info you related!! I never realized the yellow coloring was their gonads. So does that apply to all that yellow stuff hanging down out of the bell too?

We also have the Lion's Mane jellyfish, and you can tell the two apart, because Egg Yolks have 16 lobes around the bell, whereas the Lion's Mane only has 8.

Here's a photo of one of the Egg Yolks taken at Les Davis Park in Tacoma, WA:
 
Interesting that you feel their stings in the Pacific NW. I was stung primarily on my face and arm and it was incredibly mild.

I'm not sure whether the yellow stuff hanging down from the bell is gonadal or not.

Wish we had that kind of visibility today on Catalina- I was lucky to see my extended hand or my buddy at all. I think I should have spent the summer in Thailand.

Dr. Bill
 
Well, the only place we get stung is usually between our regs and our masks, or on our cheek...everything else is covered up! :zorro:

But yes, we do feel them, but nothing horrible...just that itchy, burning, hot, stingy feeling and it does go away pretty quickly.

They do have long tentacles so it's possible (same with the Lion's Mane) to get stung even without seeing their bodies...and sometimes even without seeing their tentacles!
 
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