The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Warning to Fifers after boy, 9, left in agony from brush with giant jellyfish.

Hamish endured hours of pain after brushing against creature’s tentacles while he was paddling

- AILEEN ROBERTSON arobertson@thecourier.co.uk

Fifers are being warned to look out for a species of giant stinging jellyfish after a brush from its tentacles left a young boy in agony.

Hamish Roden, 9, was left in intense pain after coming into contact with a lion’s mane jellyfish at Elie at the weekend.

The animals are more common on the west coast but have begun to be seen around Fife in recent years.

Dad Paul, 55, said Hamish and his sister Orla, 11, were paddling on their boogie boards with mum Dawn, 49, at Shell Bay on Saturday when his son “let out an almighty roar and started screaming uncontroll­ably”.

He said: “My wife got to him and spotted beside him a huge jellyfish about 15 inches wide and brown and pink in colour, which we now know to have been a lion’s mane.

“He was screaming for about an hour. There was no consoling him.”

The family, who live in Bathgate and have a caravan in Elie, tried giving Hamish an antihistam­ine and washing the stings on his legs and arms.

When the youngster was still in pain 40 minutes later, they called 999 and were told to go to the minor injuries clinic at St Andrews.

They then saw a pharmacist who told them they had done the right thing, but it was two full hours before the pain started to subside.

The NHS website advises treating jellyfish stings by rinsing the affected area with seawater and warm water.

Those with severe pain which is not going away are advised to visit a minor injuries unit, and a trip to A&E is needed for extreme reactions, including severe swelling, breathing difficulti­es and seizures.

Paul said Hamish had fully recovered and his ordeal had not discourage­d him from getting back in the water.

James Dawson, head of communitie­s and engagement at Fife Coast and Countrysid­e Trust, said the lion’s mane jellyfish was not aggressive to humans but its tentacles can deliver a painful sting.

He said stings, although painful, are not usually harmful for healthy individual­s.

“The lion’s mane jellyfish is one of several types of jellyfish found in UK waters,” said Mr Dawson.

“They use their long tentacles to ensnare small fish, crustacean­s and other jellyfish on which they feed.”

According to the marine charity Ocean, scientific research has suggested that jellyfish actually thrive in areas that are affected by human activity.

“Over-fishing, climate change and pollution have helped promote more frequent jellyfish swarms while reducing the jellies’ main predators and competitor­s and increasing their prey,” it says.

“My wife got to him and spotted a huge jellyfish about 15 inches wide and brown and pink in colour, which we now know to have been a lion’s mane. PAUL RODEN

 ??  ?? Hamish at home, a lion’s mane jellyfish, and mum Dawn and sister Orla with Hamish in the water.
Hamish at home, a lion’s mane jellyfish, and mum Dawn and sister Orla with Hamish in the water.
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