NJDEP: Clinging Jellyfish Back in the Shrewsbury River

They’re small. They sting. They cause pain and could land person in the hospital. They’re clinging jellyfish; and they’ve made their way back into the Shrewsbury River this summer season.

NJ Department of Environmental Protection officials aren’t sure how the species, usually a native of the Pacific Ocean, made its way to the Shrewsbury, but it did and they’re alerting recreational users of the river that they’re likely there and not easy to spot. They’re about the size of a dime and mostly transparent.

DEP officials say that the small, non-native species appears to be limited to a small population in the Shrewsbury.

Clinging jellyfish were first confirmed in New Jersey in 2016. Recently, Montclair University researchers reported finding about 40 clinging jellyfish of between 1 to 2 centimeters in diameter and some about the size of a dime in the area in the Shrewsbury off Monmouth Beach known as the Hook. The small jellyfish may indicate the start of a bloom.

The clinging jellyfish is not known to inhabit ocean beaches or other sandy areas but tends to attach itself to submerged aquatic vegetation and algae in back bays and estuaries, areas not heavily used for swimming.

The DEP and Montclair have teamed up to better understand the distribution of this species and to date have not confirmed its presence outside of the Shrewsbury River, except for one specimen collected from Monmouth County’s Manasquan River in 2016.

The clinging jellyfish, a native to the Pacific Ocean, is very difficult to spot in the water. A sting can produce severe pain and other localized symptoms and, in some cases, result in hospitalization. It is not known how the species found its way into the Shrewsbury River but the polyp phase of its life cycle persists from season to season.

The DEP encourages the public to exercise common sense and caution during recreation in areas where the jellyfish have been discovered. Anyone wading through these areas, especially near aquatic vegetation, should take precautions, such as wearing boots or waders to protect themselves.

If stung by a clinging jellyfish:

  • Apply white vinegar to the affected area to immobilize any remaining stinging cells.
  • Rinse the area with salt water and remove any remaining tentacle materials using gloves or a thick towel.
  • Apply a hot compress or cold pack to alleviate pain.
  • If symptoms persist or pain increases instead of subsiding, seek prompt medical attention.

The clinging jellyfish has a red, orange or violet cross across its middle. Each jellyfish can trail 60 to 90 tentacles that uncoil like sharp threads and emit painful neurotoxins. Clinging jellyfish primarily feed on zooplankton.

The jellyfish can grow to about the size of the quarter but is often around the size of a dime. Both the adult, or medusa, and polyp stages of the clinging jellyfish are capable of stinging, a mechanism they use to stun prey and to defend against predators.

For a fact sheet on clinging jellyfish, visit: www.nj.gov/dep/docs/clinging-jellyfish-factsheet.pdf

For a PowerPoint presentation on DEP clinging jellyfish research, visit: www.nj.gov/dep/docs/clinging-jellyfish-distribution.pdf

— Edited press release from NJDEP