Dataset
OBIS Australia Open in mapper Explore occurrences
Tropical box jellyfish include some of the world’s most venomous animals, leading researchers and the media to wonder whether changes in climate may drive these species into sub-tropical waters. The discovery, therefore, of small box jellyfish in the waterways of the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast of south-east Queensland raised concern. This pygmy species proved to be new to science, separated from other species in the genus Chiropsella by its very small size; its semi-circular phacellae; very shallow, coalesced gastric saccules; its peculiar, long pedalia where the ‘palm’ is greatly reduced and the nonopposing ‘fingers’ branch off together at the same level; and a knee-like bend of the pedalial canal. The residential canal/ river habitat of this species of chirodropid raises the question of whether this area is also suitable for habitation by the larger, more virulent chirodropids such as the so-called ‘deadly box jellyfish’, Chironex fleckeri. This new species, Chiropsella saxoni sp. nov., brings the total number of chirodropid species described from Australian waters to five.
Published: June 08, 2022 at 05:49
URL: https://www.marine.csiro.au/ipt/resource?r=pygmy_jellyfish
Lisa-ann Gershwin
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere
Merrick Ekins
Queensland Museum
OBIS Australia Node manager
CSIRO National Collections and Marine Infrastructure
No missing or invalid fields.
The OBIS data quality flags are documented at https://github.com/iobis/obis-qc.
| Flag | Dropped | Records | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ON_LAND | 2 |
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