The Maui News - Weekender

Sea jellies possess zombie-like characteri­stics

- By Evan Pascual ■

ctober welcomes the Halloween season, a time to conjure up your best costume and adorn your house with carved pumpkins. But beneath the sea, our marine life friends don’t need a mask to put on a fright. Many of them naturally evoke the mysterious­ness and eeriness of the Halloween spirit.

Lurking beneath the ocean’s surface is a creature with no eyes, heart, blood or brain — one could imagine they’re the “zombies” of the sea. They congregate in masses with their saucer-shaped bodies pulsating as they drift along the ocean’s currents. Slow, majestic and mesmerizin­g, the sea jelly is a creature to marvel at.

There are more than 200 species of sea jellies found throughout the world but only 15 are known to inhabit Hawaiian waters. The moon

Ojelly is one of the more commonly seen species. Although many call them jellyfish, the term is actually inaccurate. Jellies do not breathe through a set of gills the way fish do, instead they absorb oxygen through their tissue.

With a ghostly white appearance, the moon jelly has a central mouth surrounded by four rings that serve as reproducti­ve and digestive organs. Oral tentacles hang from these rings and the edges of its flanged body contain hundreds of fine stingers, or nematocyst­s, which catch its prey. Unlike the hostile nature of zombies, the moon jelly is generally harmless to humans. Its sting is hardly noticeable unless you have very sensitive skin.

At the Maui Ocean Center, the moon jellies take center stage in the Sea Jellies Exhibit. Their graceful movement paired with color-changing lights presents a grand display for guests to see. Moon jellies are one of the most commonly raised animals in aquariums worldwide. Because moon jellies are less common on Maui and have a short lifespan, Maui

Ocean Center sometimes receives adult sea jellies from the Waikiki Aquarium on Oahu. The adult sea jellies then produce polyps within the exhibit that are collected and raised behind the scenes in the Aquarium Lab.

Like a scene out of Frankenste­in, a scientist works behind closed doors surrounded by buckets of churning water, petri dishes with tiny specimens, and an array of instrument­s at the ready. This is where Nadine Nagata, the aquarist, breathes life into the next generation of moon jellies. Although she works in a sophistica­ted lab, Nagata is far from the “mad scientist” stereotype of horror films. She is nicknamed the “Jelly Mama” by her team for her passion, enthusiasm and experience in raising moon jellies, an animal that undergoes a complex life cycle to reach adulthood.

The life of a moon jelly at the aquarium begins as a tiny polyp collected from the Sea Jellies Exhibit. At this stage, the polyps remain dormant in chilled water waiting to be awakened by the right water conditions. By raising the water temperatur­e, the polyps are induced to strobilati­on, resulting in asexual reproducti­on. Stacking onto one another, the polyps release tiny, free-floating larval sea jellies known as ephyra. Over the next several weeks, Nagata and the aquarists provide ample aeration, water circulatio­n and feeding to help the ephyra develop into the medusa stage.

As a medusa, the young sea jelly has reached its full form bearing the bell-shaped body, central mouth rings and dangling tentacles. When the medusa reaches 5 inches in diameter, Nadine begins to acclimate the medusa into their new home in the cylindrica­l Sea Jellies Exhibit.

The moon jelly is just one example of the many magnificen­t creatures that dwell in Hawaiian waters. With Halloween creeping around the corner, now is a great time to recognize and appreciate the bizarre and mind-boggling creatures of the sea, many of which are quite docile like the moon jelly. It won’t take long to realize our ocean is home to animals whose appearance and behavior exceeds beyond our wildest imaginatio­n!

Evan Pascual is the marketing and public relations coordinato­r at Maui Ocean Center. “Ka Mo‘olelo Moana,” or “the Ocean Story,” is a monthly column submitted by Maui Ocean Center staff members. The center is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily in Maalaea. For more informatio­n, call 2707000.

 ?? Maui Ocean Center photo ?? Maui Ocean Center celebrates “SEA Zombies” in October, highlighti­ng ocean drifters with sea jellytheme­d explore stations, keiki story time, crafts and its popular Sea Jellies Exhibit.
Maui Ocean Center photo Maui Ocean Center celebrates “SEA Zombies” in October, highlighti­ng ocean drifters with sea jellytheme­d explore stations, keiki story time, crafts and its popular Sea Jellies Exhibit.
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