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You're swimming in the ocean
when something brushes your leg.
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When the tingling sets in,
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you realize you've been stung
by a jellyfish.
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How do these beautiful, gelatinous
creatures pack such a painful punch?
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Jellyfish are soft
because they are 95% water
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and are mostly made of a translucent
gel-like substance called mesoglea.
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With such delecate bodies,
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they rely on thousands of venom-containing
stinging cells called cnidocytes
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for protection and prey capture.
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Even baby jellyfish,
the size of a pencil eraser,
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have the ability to sting.
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Larval jellyfish, ephyrae, look like
tiny flowers pulsating in the sea.
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As they grow, they become umbrella-shaped
with a bell at the top
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and descending tentacles
around the margin.
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The largest species of jellyfish,
the lion's mane,
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has tentacles that can extend
more than 100 feet,
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longer than a blue whale.
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These tentacles contain
most of the stinging cells,
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although some species have them
on their bells, too.
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Venom is ejected via a nematocyst,
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a whip-like hollow tubule,
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which lies coiled under
high osmotic pressure.
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When mechanical or chemical stimuli
activate an external trigger,
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the lid of the cell pops open
and sea water rushes in.
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This forces a microscopic barbed
harpoon to shoot out,
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penetrate and inject
venom into its victim.
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Nematocyst discharge can occur
in less than a millionth of a second,
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making it one of nature's fastest
biomechanical processes.
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Nematocysts can continue
to fire even after a jellyfish has died,
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so it's important to remove
lingering tentacles stuck to the skin.
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Rinsing with vinegar will usually render
undischarged nematocysts inactive.
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Seawater can also help
remove residual nematocysts.
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But don't use fresh water
because any change in salt balance
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alters the osmotic pressure
outside of the cnidocyte
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and will trigger the nematocyst to fire.
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That's why urinating on the affected area,
a common folk remedy,
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may do more harm that good,
depending on the composition of the urine.
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Most jellyfish stings
are a painful nuisance,
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but some can be deadly.
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An Indo-Pacific box jelly,
also called a sea wasp,
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releases venom which can cause
contraction of the heart muscles
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and rapid death in large doses.
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There's an anti-venom,
but the venom is fast-acting,
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so you'd need immediate
medical intervention.
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Despite the impressive power
in their tentacles,
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jellies aren't invincible.
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Their stinging cells are no match
for the armor of thick-skin predators,
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like the leatherback turtle
and ocean sunfish.
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These predators both have adaptations
that prevents slippery jellyfish
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from escaping after they are engulfed:
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backwards pointing spines
in the turtle's mouth and esophagus
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and recurved teeth
behind the sunfish's cheeks.
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Even tiny lobster slipper larvae
can cling to the bell of a jellyfish
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and hitch a ride,
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snacking on the jelly while they preserve
their own energy for growth.
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Small agile fish use the jellies
as moving reefs for protection,
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darting between tentacles
without ever touching them.
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Nudibranchs, which are sea slugs
covered in protective slime,
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can actually steal the jelly's defenses
by eating the cnidocytes
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and transferring them
to specialized sacks for later use,
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as weapons against their own predators.
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Even humans might benefit
from the sting of a jellyfish one day.
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Scientists are working on manipulating
cnidocytes to deliver medicine,
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with nematocysts rarely 3% of the size
of a typical syringe needle.
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So, the next time you're out
in the ocean, be careful.
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But also, take a second
to marvel at its wonders.