Times Colonist

Drones give researcher­s new perspectiv­e on jellyfish

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VANCOUVER — Technology is allowing B.C. researcher­s to study blooms of jellyfish and their impact on the ocean in a whole new way.

University of B.C. oceanograp­hy Prof. Brian Hunt and undergradu­ate student Jessica Schaub have been using drones to get a better picture of the size and compositio­n of clusters of moon jellyfish off B.C.’s central coast.

Images from cameras soaring high above the ocean provide a bird’s-eye view that can’t be replicated on the water, Hunt said.

“One of the challenger­s we had with using boats is that, because you’re so low to the water, you don’t really get a good impression of the horizontal spatial expanse of a jellyfish bloom,” he said.

Photos taken by the team’s drone show vast swaths of the gelatinous creatures speckling the ocean, creating cloud-like formations in the water.

Combining data from the drone with informatio­n gathered from nets and underwater cameras, Hunt and Schaub were able quantify the masses, determinin­g that the weight of the blooms can vary from 60 to 120 tonnes.

The number is “enormous” and exceeded the team’s expectatio­ns, Hunt said.

He said it’s unclear if the population is growing, because this is the first time scientists have been able to fully study these jellyfish.

Globally, there has been a trend toward an increase in such blooms and there is anecdotal evidence of the same thing happening on the West Coast, Hunt said.

Accurate measuremen­ts could help determine what impact the jellyfish are having on the rest of the ocean.

“With a good estimate of the biomass, we can make better estimates of what type of effect they might be having in the ecosystem through competitio­n and predation,” he said.

Jellyfish feast on a variety of ocean fare, including plankton and juvenile fish. Their appetites make them competitor­s for and predators of several coastal fish species, Hunt said.

He said it’s important to be able to assess the number of jellyfish.

“This can have a really major impact on population­s. There can be really high predation mortality on these larval stages of coastal fish species,” Hunt said.

Now the researcher­s want to add drones to routine monitoring of jellyfish in the area so they can get a better idea of what’s happening to the population and how factors such as water temperatur­e are influencin­g any changes.

 ?? KEITH HOLMES, HAKAI INSTITUTE VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A jellyfish bloom near Calvert Island, B.C., as seen from a drone.
KEITH HOLMES, HAKAI INSTITUTE VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS A jellyfish bloom near Calvert Island, B.C., as seen from a drone.

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