DPA/Sydney
Australian scientists finally have got to see a species of giant jellyfish they have known about for more than a decade, news reports said yesterday.
The new species, 1.5m across and nicknamed “snotty” because of its white and pink colouring, was photographed by beachgoers who found it washed up near Hobart, the Tasmanian state capital.
“It’s a whopper,” marine biologist Lisa-ann Gershwin told national broadcaster ABC.
“We do get large jellyfish species and this one just happens to be this absolutely enormous specimen,” she said.
Gershwin was alerted to the find at Howden beach when a photograph was forwarded to the government’s research outfit, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO).
Gershwin, who has been researching jellyfish at the CSIRO for 20 years, said that she had documented two giant jellyfish species and this would be the third to be officially recognised.
“It’s one of those things that really makes us come face to face with the fact that there are things we don’t know about out there in nature, particularly in the ocean,” the marine biologist said.
The world’s biggest jellyfish, 3m in diameter, live in the Arctic.
An undated handout photo received yesterday shows a 1.5m new species of giant jellyfish that washed up on a beach near Hobart.