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Jellyfish blooms

Jellyfish blooms
Jellyfish blooms
Jellyfish are one of the most conspicuous animals in our oceans and are renowned for their propensity to form spectacular blooms. The unique features of the biology and ecology of jellyfish that enable them to bloom also make them successful invasive species and, in a few places around the world, jellyfish have become problematic. As man increasingly populates the world’s coastlines, interactions between humans and jellyfish are rising, often to the detriment of coastal-based industries such as tourism, fishing and power generation. However we must not lose sight of the fact that jellyfish have been forming blooms in the oceans for at least 500 million years, and are an essential component of normal, healthy ocean ecosystems. Here many of the world’s leading jellyfish experts explore the science behind jellyfish blooms. We examine the unique features of jellyfish biology and ecology that cause populations to ‘bloom and bust’, and, using case studies, we show why jellyfish are important to coastal and ocean ecosystem function. We outline strategies coastal managers can use to mitigate the effects of blooms on coastal industries thereby enabling humans to coexist with these fascinating creatures. Finally we highlight how jellyfish benefit society; providing us with food and one of the most biomedically-important compounds discovered in the 20th century.
Blooms, Ctenophores, Jellyfish, Medusae, Nonindigenous marine jellyfish
978-94-007-7014-0
Springer
Pitt, Kylie A.
5aa1bb5c-3ee9-4b32-b27f-1f3373989148
Lucas, Cathy H.
521743e3-b250-4c6b-b084-780af697d6bf
Pitt, Kylie A.
5aa1bb5c-3ee9-4b32-b27f-1f3373989148
Lucas, Cathy H.
521743e3-b250-4c6b-b084-780af697d6bf

Pitt, Kylie A. and Lucas, Cathy H. (eds.) (2014) Jellyfish blooms , Dordrecht, NL. Springer, 300pp.

Record type: Book

Abstract

Jellyfish are one of the most conspicuous animals in our oceans and are renowned for their propensity to form spectacular blooms. The unique features of the biology and ecology of jellyfish that enable them to bloom also make them successful invasive species and, in a few places around the world, jellyfish have become problematic. As man increasingly populates the world’s coastlines, interactions between humans and jellyfish are rising, often to the detriment of coastal-based industries such as tourism, fishing and power generation. However we must not lose sight of the fact that jellyfish have been forming blooms in the oceans for at least 500 million years, and are an essential component of normal, healthy ocean ecosystems. Here many of the world’s leading jellyfish experts explore the science behind jellyfish blooms. We examine the unique features of jellyfish biology and ecology that cause populations to ‘bloom and bust’, and, using case studies, we show why jellyfish are important to coastal and ocean ecosystem function. We outline strategies coastal managers can use to mitigate the effects of blooms on coastal industries thereby enabling humans to coexist with these fascinating creatures. Finally we highlight how jellyfish benefit society; providing us with food and one of the most biomedically-important compounds discovered in the 20th century.

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More information

Published date: 2014
Keywords: Blooms, Ctenophores, Jellyfish, Medusae, Nonindigenous marine jellyfish
Organisations: Ocean Biochemistry & Ecosystems

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 353180
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/353180
ISBN: 978-94-007-7014-0
PURE UUID: 2714c3b5-5908-4794-b2f8-36e62c052815
ORCID for Cathy H. Lucas: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5929-7481

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 31 May 2013 08:28
Last modified: 23 Jul 2022 01:37

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Contributors

Editor: Kylie A. Pitt
Editor: Cathy H. Lucas ORCID iD

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