Killers In Paradise
The tropics are home to the world's most venomous creatures-jellyfish with 4 brains, 24 eyes and stingers that can kill you in a minute flat
- By Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2005, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
They also have the same stomach—or, rather, stomachs. Because a box jelly, as Jamie Seymour puts it, “charges around the ocean all day hunting mobile prey, prawns and fish,” its metabolic rate is ten times that of a drifting jellyfish. So, to swiftly access the energy it needs, the box jellyfish has developed a unique digestive system, with separate stomachs in each of its tentacles. All box jellies turn their food into a semi-digested broth in the bell, and then feed it down through the tentacles to be absorbed. Since a Chironex can have up to 60 tentacles, each as long as 3 yards, in effect it has up to 180 yards of stomach.
If box jellyfish eyes are a puzzle, its four primitive brains—positioned on each side of its body and attached to it by the same strand that anchors its eyes—are an enigma. Can the four separate brains communicate with each other? If so, do they merge the images they receive from the 24 eyes into one image? And how do they manage if different eyes detect radically different images? Nilsson shrugs. “They’ve evolved a rather advanced system unlike any other animal on earth,” he says. “But we have no idea what’s going on in their four brains, and I suspect it will be a long time before we find out.”
Six months ago, after tagging Chironex in the wild with tiny ultrasonic transmitters that allow him to track an individual jellyfish for up to three weeks, Jamie Seymour made an announcement that startled his fellow scientists. “During daylight hours, from about six in the morning to three in the afternoon,” he said, “they moved in straight-line distances of about 250 yards an hour. But from 3 p.m. to 6 a.m. the next morning, they moved an average of less than ten yards an hour.”
Determined to see the phenomenon for himself, Seymour donned a wet suit and plunged into shallow water off a beach south of Cairns. There, he observed Chironex resting motionless on the seafloor, their bells not pulsating and their tentacles completely relaxed. When he shined lights on them, they rose, swam around for a short time, and then settled back on the seafloor. Sleeping!
“It makes a lot of sense for them to become inactive at night when they can’t see their prey,” says Seymour. “They decrease the energy used in locomotion and divert it to growth.” But not all researchers accept that Chironex do, in fact, sleep. And because the box jellyfish brain is so radically and impossibly different from the makeup of all other brains on our planet, we may never know who is right.
While scientists struggle to untangle the biological secrets of box jellyfish, doctors are having increasing success in treating the damage they do to humans. An antivenin for Chironex stings—made from antibodies created in sheep that are injected with the venom—is now administered to victims in northern Australian hospitals. There is no antivenin yet for the Irukandji syndrome, but Lisa-ann Gershwin is edging toward an important breakthrough—the first-ever mass breeding of tiny box jellyfish in a lab, from specimens she caught at Palm Cove this year. So far she’s managed to breed just a handful of the “up to a million” jellyfish that she says researchers like Ken Winkel need to develop an effective antivenin.
More promising for serious irukandji stings, at least in the short term, is a treatment being used in the TownsvilleHospital’s intensive care unit: the infusion of a solution of magnesium sulfate directly into a victim’s veins. “We’ve seen it swiftly reduce, to safe levels, the hypertension, and it lessens the pain considerably,” says Michael Corkeron, one of the unit’s physicians. But, he cautions, “we still have more to learn, including the correct dosage, before magnesium becomes standard treatment.”
So until a fail-safe cure is found, box jellyfish, from the tiny irukandji that killed Robert King to the huge Chironex, will continue to cause illness and death in tropical waters worldwide. Says Jamie Seymour: “All we can do is alert people to the danger, here in Australia and overseas, and make sure that anyone stung is treated as quickly as possible. Then it’s in the lap of the gods.”
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Comments (1)
I was fascinated to read all the developments and research being done on the carukia barnesi and chironex fleckeri. As a trained nurse I worked for Dr Jack Barnes in the 60's as one of his nurses in his clinic at Wallmaurra Medical Centre. Because I could type as well, I found myself involved in his marine research, at first typing up his notes, but later heading out on box jellyfish hunts. Dr Jack would sit at the head of the dinghy, spot a jelly, reach in with his bare hand and deposit it into a bucket. We then spent hours milking the venom from the tentacles of the chironex fleckeri for use by the NHMRC in the preparation of the antivenin - I clearly remember the day when the first antivenin arrived at Dr Jack's surgery. He was an amazing man and I feel privileged to have been a very small part of that early research.
Posted by carol o'herlihy on June 21,2008 | 11:07 AM