The one thing stopping jellyfish from taking over - Mariela Pajuelo & Javier Antonio Quinones

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2023-08-29 ・ TED-Ed


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The one thing stopping jellyfish from taking over - Mariela Pajuelo & Javier Antonio Quinones

946,160 views ・ 2023-08-29

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
Over the past two decades, jellyfish have begun to overwhelm our oceans.
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In New Zealand, divers swat off millions of stinging jellyfish
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each no larger than a grain of pepper.
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In Sweden, a massive cluster of moon jellyfish
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shut down one of the world’s largest nuclear reactors
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by clogging the plant’s essential pipes.
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And in the Sea of Japan, thousands of 200 kilogram Nomura’s jellyfish
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with bells two meters in diameter swarm fishermen,
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snapping nets and devouring local fish.
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Around the world, these animals voraciously consume fish eggs and larvae,
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routinely undermine marine farming efforts,
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and outcompete adult fish by consuming the resources they need to survive.
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If things stay on their current trajectory,
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we could be headed for a future where the entire ocean is thick with jellyfish.
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So, is there anything that can keep these gelatinous creatures under control?
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Enter, the humble sea turtle.
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There are a wide range of marine animals that feed on jellyfish,
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but sea turtles are among their most ancient predators.
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01:22
And while every known species of sea turtle preys on jellyfish
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at some point in their lives,
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none consume quite as many as the leatherback.
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Leatherbacks are the largest species of sea turtle,
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and they eat jellyfish almost exclusively,
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devouring well over 1,000 metric tons of them over their roughly 50-year lifespans.
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This is particularly remarkable because jellyfish are 95% water
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and very low in calories,
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so to maintain a healthy weight,
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the average 500 kilogram leatherback
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needs to eat roughly 400 kilograms of jellyfish every day.
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That’s roughly the same weight as a grand piano.
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And while some sea turtle species have been documented
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selectively eating their preys’ protein-rich gonads,
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leatherbacks eat jellyfish whole—
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mowing down huge swaths of unsuspecting jellies.
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Normally, jellyfish aren't quite this defenseless.
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Most species have tentacles covered in cells called cnidocytes,
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which contain venomous harpoons coiled and ready to launch.
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These barbed structures, known as nematocysts,
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are released on contact.
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Jellyfish frequently use this sting to paralyze and kill their food,
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and it can also irritate the skin of would-be intruders.
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But it's completely useless against sea turtles.
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Most of these reptiles have thick scales covered in keratin—
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the same material that makes up nails and claws.
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This leathery armor protects their skin while they hunt,
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and any captured prey that tries to escape is impaled
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on the keratinized spikes lining the leatherback’s esophagus.
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For most sea turtles, these adaptations make individual jellyfish easy prey.
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However, a jelly population’s true defense mechanism
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is in how quickly they can reproduce.
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Almost all jellyfish species have evolved to reproduce both sexually and asexually,
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allowing them to increase their numbers with or without a partner.
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In tropical environments,
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jellyfish reproduce constantly throughout the year.
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But in more temperate climates,
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species often reproduce all at once in a massive bloom,
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where jellies multiply at alarming rates.
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And humanity is making these blooms much more frequent.
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Fertilizer runoff from farms introduces chemicals
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that simultaneously kill other fish and prompt blooms.
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High water temperatures caused by climate change
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speed up jellyfish reproduction and extend the reproductive season.
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Meanwhile, both marine construction and pollution
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dramatically increase the surface area for jellyfish polyps
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to attach, grow, and mature.
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All these issues require a wide range of policy-based solutions.
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But one major way to prevent jellyfish populations from getting out of hand
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is to protect their natural predators—
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many of whom are currently under threat.
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Small-scale fisheries that are essential to communities in Mexico and Peru
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often use gillnets,
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which unintentionally capture and kill hundreds of sea turtles each year.
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In the Eastern Pacific, these practices could drive leatherbacks to extinction
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in the next 60 years.
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Fortunately, some researchers have already developed inexpensive tools
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to minimize these risks.
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Attaching green LED lights to gillnets has proven useful
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for allowing sea turtles, dolphins, and even seabirds to avoid fishing gear.
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Solutions like this should allow small-scale fishers
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to support their communities
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while minimizing their impact on our leathery ocean defenders.
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