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      Rapid scavenging of jellyfish carcasses reveals the importance of gelatinous material to deep-sea food webs

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          Abstract

          Jellyfish blooms are common in many oceans, and anthropogenic changes appear to have increased their magnitude in some regions. Although mass falls of jellyfish carcasses have been observed recently at the deep seafloor, the dense necrophage aggregations and rapid consumption rates typical for vertebrate carrion have not been documented. This has led to a paradigm of limited energy transfer to higher trophic levels at jelly falls relative to vertebrate organic falls. We show from baited camera deployments in the Norwegian deep sea that dense aggregations of deep-sea scavengers (more than 1000 animals at peak densities) can rapidly form at jellyfish baits and consume entire jellyfish carcasses in 2.5 h. We also show that scavenging rates on jellyfish are not significantly different from fish carrion of similar mass, and reveal that scavenging communities typical for the NE Atlantic bathyal zone, including the Atlantic hagfish, galatheid crabs, decapod shrimp and lyssianasid amphipods, consume both types of carcasses. These rapid jellyfish carrion consumption rates suggest that the contribution of gelatinous material to organic fluxes may be seriously underestimated in some regions, because jelly falls may disappear much more rapidly than previously thought. Our results also demonstrate that the energy contained in gelatinous carrion can be efficiently incorporated into large numbers of deep-sea scavengers and food webs, lessening the expected impacts (e.g. smothering of the seafloor) of enhanced jellyfish production on deep-sea ecosystems and pelagic–benthic coupling.

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          Anthropogenic causes of jellyfish blooms and their direct consequences for humans: a review

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            The jellyfish joyride: causes, consequences and management responses to a more gelatinous future.

            Human-induced stresses of overfishing, eutrophication, climate change, translocation and habitat modification appear to be promoting jellyfish (pelagic cnidarian and ctenophore) blooms to the detriment of other marine organisms. Mounting evidence suggests that the structure of pelagic ecosystems can change rapidly from one that is dominated by fish (that keep jellyfish in check through competition or predation) to a less desirable gelatinous state, with lasting ecological, economic and social consequences. Management actions needed to stop such changes require tactical coping strategies and longer-term preventative responses based on fundamental and targeted research on this understudied group.
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              Jellyfish overtake fish in a heavily fished ecosystem.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
                Proc. R. Soc. B.
                The Royal Society
                0962-8452
                1471-2954
                December 07 2014
                December 07 2014
                December 07 2014
                : 281
                : 1796
                : 20142210
                Affiliations
                [1 ]International Research Institute of Stavanger, Mekjarvik 12, Randaberg 4070, Norway
                [2 ]University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1000 Pope Road, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA
                [3 ]Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA), Thormøhlensgate 53D, Bergen 5006, Norway
                [4 ]National Oceanography Center, University of Southampton Waterfront Campus, European Way, Southampton SO14 3ZH, UK
                Article
                10.1098/rspb.2014.2210
                25320167
                8bc38dc0-cb17-4628-8063-8870b462e1b8
                © 2014

                https://royalsociety.org/journals/ethics-policies/data-sharing-mining/

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