An influx of visitors — jellyfish — float in on currents to North Olympic Peninsula

With the falling of autumn leaves and return of the chinook salmon comes another seasonal end of the road for another life-form — the jellyfish.

Nearing the end of their lives, open-water jellyfish in the Strait of Juan de Fuca are often washed into bays and inlets by fall and winter currents, sometimes deep into Puget Sound, said Tiffany Pate, naturalist for the Arthur D. Feiro Marine Life Center.

Hundreds of small brown lion’s mane jellyfish were spotted along the Port Angeles waterfront Oct. 9, and on Saturday, swarms of sea nettle jellyfish, with yellow bells and red tentacles, were common off Port Angeles City Pier.

To the east, two good places to look for jellyfish are at Fort Flagler and Cape George, where jellyfish often wash ashore at this time of year, said Anne Murphy, executive director of the Port Townsend Marine Science Center.

Look, but don’t touch

“They can still sting even after they wash up,” Murphy warned. “Leave them alone.”

The lion’s mane jellyfish can deliver a sting similar to a bee’s — not usually dangerous, but they can be painful.

Other species that can often be seen on the coast, from Sekiu to Port Townsend, include the moon jellyfish and the water jelly, which isn’t a true jellyfish, Pate said.

One that can be quite exciting to find is the sailor-by-the-sea jellyfish, said Murphy.

“I haven’t seen those for years,” she said.

Unlike the previously mentioned species, the sailors-by-the-sea are ocean-going jellyfish who do not live in straits or bays and are often accompanied by other oceanic debris.

Where to look

If they’re in one bay, they’re probably in the others, she said.

In the open ocean, a lion’s mane jellyfish bell can reach a span of 8 feet, with tentacles 25 to 50 feet long.

“The biggest one I’ve seen here was 2 feet across,” Pate said.

Most of the lion’s mane jellyfish seen Oct. 9 were 6 to 10 inches wide.

There isn’t as much food available, so they don’t grow as large, she said.

At the end of each summer, most of the area’s jellyfish die, victims of bacterial infection or starvation as their summer plankton food source dies off.

Fish-eating jellies, like the lion’s mane and sea nettle, are usually open-water creatures, and there is less food for them in the bays, Pate said.

When they are pulled into bays and inlets, they become trapped and are at the mercy of the flow of water.

“They’re going to get bashed into rocks, boats and piers,” she said.

Next year, their tiny offspring, which now cling to rocks and pier pilings in shallow waters, will grow to adulthood in early summer and start the process again.

________

Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-417-3535 or at arwyn.rice@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Operation Shielding Hope helping to reduce overdose deaths

Clallam County drops from second-highest death rate to 11th in state

Kayla Oakes, former director of the Juan de Fuca Festival Foundation and current director of education for Field Arts & Events Hall, hangs student artwork in the Port Angeles City Hall atrium on Thursday in preparation for this weekend’s Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts. The three-day festival features music, food, a craft market and other entertainment spread over four stages. Additional festival information is available at jffa.org. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Festival preparation

Kayla Oakes, former director of the Juan de Fuca Festival Foundation and… Continue reading

Properties suggested for conservation

Project locations around Quilcene

Olympic Medical Center commissioners vote to move forward

Hospital will continue to pursue partners

Memorial Day services set for three-day weekend

Ceremonies across Peninsula to take place Monday

Arrest made in Sequim hit and run

Suspect found in Oklahoma

Applications open for tourism marketing grants

Visit Port Angeles is accepting applications for six $2,500… Continue reading

A crane lifts the framework for a new scoreboard being installed at Port Angeles Civic Field. The nearly $1 million, 40-foot-wide scoreboard, which dwarfs the field’s old board, is expected to be operational in time for opening day of the Port Angeles Lefties baseball season on May 30. About $800,000 came from state funding through the West Coast League, and $120,000 in Port Angeles Lodging Tax funds also were awarded. Due to technical issues, final placement of the structure was postponed on Wednesday. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
New scoreboard

A crane lifts the framework for a new scoreboard being installed at… Continue reading

Joint Public Safety Facility pared down

Clallam County, Port Angeles aim for bids in August

Jason McNickle. (Clallam Transit System)
Clallam Transit appoints McNickle as its interim general manager

Operations manager will move into new role starting Aug. 1

New administrators named for Port Angeles school district

The Port Angeles School District has announced new personnel… Continue reading

One transported to hospital after crash

A man was transported to Olympic Medical Center in… Continue reading