Nomura’s Giant Jellyfish – Sea of Japan Photos
Oh god!! Have you seen a Giant Jellyfish in your entire life? It is too big, this is not magic of photographs! The Nomura’s Jellyfish is a giant jellyfish that is causing a problem in Japan's coastal villages. Giant jellyfish descend on the ocean of Japan, causing untold destruction to coastal villages and leaving a trail of devastation and human depression behind.
Nomura’s Giant Jellyfish can rise up to 6 feet in diameter and weight more than 450 pounds (220 kilograms) that’s why Japanese waters have been flooded with the massive sea creatures. Nomura Jellyfish is the biggest Jellyfish in the world.
Scientists think they originate in the Yellow Sea and in Chinese waters. For the third year since 2005, sea presents are moving them into the Sea of Japan. The jellyfish grow to an enormous size as they are transported by ocean currents said by Monty Williams, a marine biologist at Alabama's Dauphin Island Sea Lab.
Researchers said that Jellyfish are usually kept in check by fish, which eat small jellyfish and compete for jellyfish food such as zooplankton. This Nomura’s Giant Jellyfish - enormous creatures can rupture through fishing nets, as devastate restricted fisheries with their taste for fish eggs and larvae.
Jellyfish figures are growing in Southeast Asia, the Black Sea, the Gulf of Mexico and the North Sea, Richardson said.
Ue’s team observed many specimens with umbrellas determining 10 to 50 centimeters across, and they calculated an average distribution of 2.14 jellyfish per 100 square meters, between June 20 and 24, 2009.
Source: National Geographic, cnn.com…

















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