Irukandji
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What is the size of a man's thumbnail, lurks in the tropical waters of Northern Australia's Barrier Reef, is almost invisible, and can kill a human in a few days?
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Carukia Barnesi
More commonly known as the Irukandji jellyfish and related to the Box jellyfish, this tiny creature has a 2cm bell and 4 tentacles 50 to 500 mm in length. Their preferred habitat is the deeper waters of the reef. but are often swept inland by currents, making them a threat not only to divers and snorkelers but tourists as well. Irukandji's sting, while not felt immediately, brings extreme pain throughout the body and, if left untreated, can resulted in death. These jellyfish are tiny, see-through, almost invisible and can easily swim through safety nets put up to protects swimmers and tourists on the coast of Northern Australia.
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The Box Jellyfish has the most deadliest venom known in the animal kingdom (but the Irukandji may soon take this spot). It is responsible for at least 5,567 recorded human deaths since 1954. Most of these have been perpetrated by the larger Box Jelly species.
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Unlike other jellyfish, Irukandji's venom is injected only by the tips of the tentacles, which is why the sting is mild and typically unnoticed until the venom starts to take affect. Despite this, they have stingers (which look like drops of water) along the entire length of the tentacles and on the bell.
Irukandji Syndrome
Those stung by Irukandji start to feel pain about 30 minutes after the initial sting and can expect several days (although sometimes just a few hours) of hell: Excruciating muscle cramps in the arms and legs, severe pain in the back and kidneys, a burning sensation of the skin and face, headaches, nausea, restlessness, sweating, vomiting, high heart rate and blood pressure and, in the worst case, death. One tourist suffered a fatal brain hemorrhage after coming into contact with the tiny jellyfish.
There is no known antidote for the sting, but as of last year (2007), magnesium phosphate is being used to treat Irukandji Syndrome.
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The filming of "Fool's Gold" (starring Kate Hudson and Matthew McConaughey) was temporarily suspended due to an Irukandji scare. Dr. Jamie Seymour found five Irukandji in the water and issued the warning.
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When properly treated, a single sting is not normally fatal, but at least two deaths have resulted from Irukandji Syndrome, with possibly many more which have been wrongly attributed to other causes.
The name, Carukia Barnesi, was given because of the dedication of Dr, Jack Barnes who, in 1964, spent several hours lying in the water in a wetsuit near Cairns. When a thumbnail-sized jellyfish swam past his mask Dr. Barnes stung himself, his son, and a lifeguard to make sure the specimen he had caught was the one responsible for Irukandji Syndrome. (Personally, I think Dr. Barnes should have been arrested for assault and attempted murder and the Irukandji should have been named after his son and the lifeguard.)
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A warning posted October 2nd, 2008 by Irukandji expert Dr. Lisa-Anne Gershwin from the Australian Marine Stinger Advisory Service says there could be huge blooms of the potentially deadly jellyfish along the Queensland's coast this summer.
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The information which is presently known about the Irukandji jellyfish is due in the most part to the extensive field-work and research of Dr. Jamie Seymour. "From November through to May everybody's forced to swim inside nets on the coasts. That changes the entire way the beach is used here."
FIRST AID
Dr. Michael Corkeron, of Queensland's Townsville Hospital, has reported successful results with magnesium infusions to fight the jellyfish's lethal venum. "The remarkable thing is that magnesium infusium is a long-established, very safe and inexpensive treatment," he says.
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The Irukandji Jellyfish Web site
The CRC Reef Research Centre's literature about Irukandji
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Story and layout by: LemonadeMultimedia
CommentsLoading...
Darn lethal little fellows there, well don't think I want to visit down under, until there is a guaranteed antidote. We get jellyfish here on our Durban coast, they hurt like hell and yes there have been some deaths caused by some people being allergic to the poison. Same as bee stings and penicillin.
That happens, so maybe I will, if the chance arises, go and visit Oz.
CW - My husband and I are both divers...so we watched the show on Discovery when it first aired. It was truly disturbing...especially watching the one scientist in such excruciating pain. After that, I thought twice about wearing a shortie while diving and decided it would be more prudent to wear a full suit. It's still not perfect protection. I believe the scientist above...or one of them anyway...was stung on the mouth or face. Scary stuff!
I saw that program on my TV a couple of months back. Most deadly things are small.
The phrase "good things come in small packages" doesn't apply here!
When I lived in Florida we went to the beach and I was stung by a jelly fish or something with long tentacles and jumped out of the water so fast the I don't remember getting from the knee deep water to the shore. I had scars of that for ears. The pain was so bad and lasted for days. I have no idea what kind of jelly fish stung me---to this day I will not go into the water.
I would not want to be stung by one of these, did not even know what a Irukandji was until I read your hub.
Great work CW. You always have something interesting to teach us.
I'm just so glad I don't live anywhere near a jellyfish population. The closest I've been to one was the Monterey Bay Museum. I can imagine worse things than beings stung by a jellyfish I guess, but not many...
Informative hub. My brother is in New Zealand, on vaca from Iraq right now. I'm gonna tell him to watch out if he goes swimming.
CW, That would lok cool!
CW - LOL! I'll admit sometimes the wings get in the way of the tank... So tell me, what exactly are sprytes supposed to be doing if scuba diving is so unnatural? :)
Well see now...that's the problem.
1. Most of us fae folk are starting to get up there in age. We're not immortal...despite our lengthy life spans. So frollicking and fluttering have been reserved for holidays such as Beltane etc.
2. Unfortunately, some over the top liberal environmentalist got a hold of a sample of our fairy dust and using completely fabricated evidence convinced a lot of gullible people that it was partially responsible for global warming. Fighting it is just not worth the effort.
3. I still sing,..allll the time. Every day. From the time I get up until the time I fall asleep I'm a'singin' all the time. Darn shame you can't hear it...but what can I say.
So with all this free time, a few of us have taken up a new hobby or two. Mine is scuba diving...
When I was a kid I was sure that alligators lived in the sewers and would sneak up through the toilet. Guess who was willingly constipated for years?
After that, just as I was assured that no such thing could occur, a rat crawled out of the neighbor's toilet, and I had a whole new fear to conquer!
But all seriousness aside, I love, and fear, the ocean. I have been told by many an old salt that that is a very good way to approach the 7/10 surface of the Earth.
Great hub!
Cheers!
Chef Jeff
I fear the deep, never have been able to walk on water. LOL ewww jellyfish are so pretty to look at, as long as I'm farrrr away!!
Is there any prevention from Irukandji(like some spray or body suit which will totally protect). Also do you know if the drop bears are for real (read on these hubs). I would love to visit Australia but hopefully come back with pleasant memories.
Thanks CW. Hope your health is improving. Btw here is the link about drop bears:
Let me know what you findout about drop bears. It was scary video so what you are saying is the bite "can" but not will kill. Are there reasons when the person bitten survives the bite?
Thanks CW. Atleast one caveat removed for tourists to Australia....hehe
Fascinating!
I got bite by a spider when i was a child and get my ear blueeeeeeee,
=( But I'm alive!
Irukandji are so deadly, at my country is also know as "Agua malas" and they are another Medusa species.
By the way, good information, i am using it to do a marine report for school(grade 7). But personally I think Jack Barnes should not be jailed because he told them about what he had discovered and they did not believe him. I am from Australia but I swim in our beaches all the time buy I only ever get stung by Bluebottles, and I've only got stung 4 times.
constant,
when did you publish this page
Great facts
If this creature has the most powerful known venom then that means creating the most powerful antidote so far my guess is to try and capture 30-50 of them to have enough venom for research and finally having the antidote for this.We don't know much about irukandji but if it starts to immigrate to other territories it could be a world threat unlike any other so we should work fast.



















sschilke 3 years ago
Constant,
Interesing stuff, but it does make me curious as to what it would feel like to touch one of those suckers. Whether it really would be that bad. Kind of like sticking your tongue out and touching a frozen chain link fence.
Good hub.
sschilke