Newport Harbor hosts ‘ghosts’
Andrew Edwards
Propelled by Pacific currents, a multitude of jellyfish have made
their way into Newport Harbor, a destination the aquatic visitors are
not likely to leave.
The translucent moon jellyfish could be seen floating in the Rhine
Channel’s greenish waters Tuesday. The small clear-white animals,
swimming around the boats that lined the waterway, were only a
fraction of the jellyfish that could be seen when the creatures first
arrived last week.
“Last week, they were floating around the back in a super-thick
cloud,” Dylan Louros of Huntington Beach said, while waxing a boat
docked at Rhine Channel.
It was “kind of like that movie, ‘Finding Nemo,’” he added,
referring to an animated film that contained a scene loaded with
jellyfish.
Tuesday, the remaining jellyfish looked “like ghosts in the
water,” as described by Newport Beach resident Thomas Bogovich, who
was working with Louros.
Jellyfish are not unknown in Newport Harbor. A previous arrival of
moon jellyfish to Rhine Channel is only one example of an earlier
visit.
On the Lido Peninsula side of the channel, Susie Smith, owner of
Makin Waves Salon, has had a waterfront view of the pulsating
swimmers since they arrived.
“A lot of people bring their kids out to see them,” Smith said.
“They’re just amazing little creatures, don’t you think?”
The jellyfish were likely traveling with ocean currents when a
high tide pushed them into the harbor, Orange Coast College marine
biologist Dennis Kelly said. For jellyfish that drift into the Rhine
Channel, the tides are too strong to give the animals a chance to
make it back to the ocean.
“There’s no way they’re ever going to get out of there,” Kelly
said.
Moon jellyfish can sting their prey, but cannot injure people,
Kelly said.
The jellyfish in the harbor are nearing the end of their lives,
Kelly said. Confined in small waterways like Rhine Channel, it’s only
a matter of time until the animals run out of food and oxygen. Time
to give the jellyfish a look may be running out.
“If you haven’t seen them in the wild, this is the chance to do
so,” Kelly said.
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