LiQUiFY Magazine December 2014 | Page 7

W hat is up with the big blue blobs right now? They’re a frequent visitor to the Queensland coast and over the years we’ve seen them occasionally boom and sometimes not turn up at all - but why are they here right now in seemingly plague proportions? Normal seasonal fluctuation in numbers are hard to predict, but it has been suggested that this year the combination of favourable meteorological and climate along with ever diminishing populations of the jellies’ natural predators is contributing to the so-called bloom. But the verdict is still out on whether or not the world’s jellyfish populations are in fact increasing with climate change, global warming and other man-made factors such as over fishing. The jellocalypse, as it is referred to by some, may just be a myth, with a recent international study suggesting that there is no tangible evidence global jellyfish numbers have actually increased over the last 200 years. The study and report entitled Recurrent Jellyfish Blooms are a Consequence of Global Oscillations was led by Dr Rob Condon of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama US, along with experts from the Global Jellyfish Group - a group of over 30 key researchers including lead co-author Winthrop Professor Carlos Duarte of The University of Western Australia’s Oceans Institute. “The important aspect about our work is that we have provided the long-term baseline backed with all data available to science, which will enable scientists to build on and