Rocky Point Talk archive

Jellyfish warnings

Started by Roberto · Jun 4, 2017 · 48 replies
Roberto
City and state officials canvasing beaches and passing out literature warning about a recent influx of jellyfish.
ernesto
The blue portuguese man o war? Already? Those guys suck
Roberto
Port Captain raised a yellow flag preventive and a white flag indicative for all beach goers according the latest issue of JOINUS. Whatever that means?? Did not specify the type. Said also neutralize poison with vinegar and apply ice for pain.
marybna
If you have problem with bee stings you will have a reaction to Jelly Fish. I grew up in Hawaii and a lot of people have the same reaction. Be careful.
wendell
have yet to see any jellyfish washed up or in the water on Playa Encanto
Jungle Jim
Vinegar.............maybe, might cause a reaction worse then the initial sting!

Ammonia.........yes.

Urine...............yes.

I have ALWAYS carried a plastic spray bottle of grocery store quality ammonia on my boat. It WILL neutralize the stinging venom of any jellyfish encountered in the Sea of Cortez.

Some things to consider: An adult Portuguese Man O War drifting off-shore may only be ten inches across it's blue gas filled crested float. The underside of the float consists of several types of feeding polyps, young medusas and tangles of long stinging tentacles that can reach over sixty feet into the water column. Those tentacles are armed with the largest stinging capsules in the jellyfish world and can readily paralyze a large fish. The trailing "hunting" tentacles form a sort of wide snare that passing fish, shrimp and other plankton animals rarely escape. The tentacles are muscular and the animal can pull them up in rough weather as well as use them to bring prey up to the main body of the colony to feed. Each stinging capsule contains a spring loaded venom filled coiled barb that easily penetrates human skin where it remains firmly attached. The larger stinging capsules known as nematocysts can be as big as a small pea and beautiful red, green or blue in color. The smaller tentacles may be completely transparent and difficult to see even as they stick to your skin burning like fire.

Talk to any fish killers that troll with lures out of RP, all will have tales to tell about the painful whiplash like wounds on their arms, faces and bare chests caused by those tentacles that get caught up on the monofilament fishing line then smack the rod tip as they reel in the lure or fish and end up sticking to you like glue.

When the early summer winds blow the blue drifters in shore and they get beat up in the surf (like this coming week end), the tentacles get torn off and pulverized into tiny bits that are still living animals and can still sting just as powerfully as when they were part of the drifting colony. This is when they become a hazard for beach goers. The sting of the Man-of-War can kill an adult human bean! The excruciating pain can put a person into a coma! The washed up float is relatively harmless as the outer skin as no stinging capsules but if there is any trace of the ragged remains of the tentacles on the underside of the float watch out!

Also, the Man-of-War is not a jellyfish, it is a colony of animals known as Siphonophores with many thousands of tiny animals contributing their different functions to the organization of the colony.

JJ
mondone
I last posted this in Sept 2013-

Oh no, the urine myth is making a re-appearance. I posted this previously on the forum, maybe it's time for refresher:

As a person who has had considerable training and internship in Poison Control Centers, I can tell you that there are no conclusive research studies that have proved that urine or ammonia has any value whatsoever in relieving jellyfish stings. If fact, depending on the urine, it can actually make it worse. Urine contains so much fresh water, it will actually make any remaining nematocysts ( which contain the toxin that causes the discomfort) to fire, releasing more toxin. That's why we recommend using seawater only to rinse the area. Vinegar is 5% acetic acid,(CH3COOH) which has shown to neutralize unfired nematocysts so that they cannot further inject venom. Now, keep in mind, this is true for jellyfish stings, not the Portuguese Man-O-War, a jellyfish look-a-like, but different creature. Some of our studies have shown vinegar to cause their nematocysts to release venom. That is why I recommend the baking soda/seawater paste instead. There is a product you may want to want to have with you called Jellyfish Squish spray. I keep a couple bottles in my casa just in case. It's good to use after the treatments above to help the pain and discomfort.
Jungle Jim
Mondone..............

Urine=Urea.

Urea=Ammonia with CO2.

Pain and discomfort relief=a big bottle of high proof vodka.

Your baking soda/seawater paste mix=I'll be taking with me this weekend.

JJ
playaperro
Red Cross will treat for free and give proper treatment if near town. Small donation always helps.
AZRob
Jungle Jim said:
Mondone..............

Urine=Urea.

Urea=Ammonia with CO2.

Pain and discomfort relief=a big bottle of high proof vodka.

Your baking soda/seawater paste mix=I'll be taking with me this weekend.

JJ



Soon as I read your post, I knew you were going to get schooled as I was. Im with JJ, I know for a fact that urine works, I also know ammonia will help also. Than the ice and a stiff drink helps. I go with urine first choice.

I never have the time to get the baking soda to try. I want the pain gone asap.
Jungle Jim
Lemmie tell-a-you a scary tale...............

So, a few years back just about this time of the year I was trolling a weed and trash line maybe thirty miles off shore when all of the sudden my left side Yammi came to an instantaneous stop. I looked back to see a length of yellow poly rope trailing behind the boat. I raised the motor only to see a solid ball of the shit completely wrapped around the prop causing it to seize up against the lower unit. My Yammies are the long shaft models so I couldn't do anything about it without getting into the water. So, I grab a big knife and jump in. The instant I hit the water I thought I was being electrocuted and being burned alive. I climbed back into the boat screaming and flailing. The wife starts into the full fledged freak mode and we both see the jellyfish tentacles wrapped around my chest, back, arms and thighs (lucky I had swim trunks on). These were big thick ones about the diameter of a soda straw, transparent blue with shiny red, green and blue beads inside. The things were clinging to my skin like glue, I got my saltwater wash down nozzle out and tried to hose em off, no luck, we had to use a knife to scrape em off one by one as they were harpooned into my skin. The pain was so intense that I was getting woosey. We had our trusty spray bottle with ammonia in it and she sprayed my down and scrubbed it in with a towel. Believe me IT WORKED! I'm sure that I didn't have that bottle of ammonia that I would have been dead.

We did have a perfectly functional right side Yammie still running so began our slow run back to PP. When we got to the marina two hours later the guys were freaking out as I now looked like someone had horse whipped me. The stings had turned into lines of raised red welts still burning like fire. I told them what had happened and they were going to call Cruz Roja but I said no. Got back to the condo and took and hour long cold shower that relieved some of the pain. I had to sleep sitting up for the next three days. Saw my Doc here in Yuma was told there was nothing to do but sweat it out and that the ammonia had probably saved my life.

Now, I must say that I have been a beach boy my whole life and back in Newport Beach California in the 60's every lifeguard station had bottles of ammonia handy as treatment for the giant purple jellyfish that would get chopped up in the summer surf and sting the hell out of hundreds of people every day. They never closed the beach when the jellies were there but word got around fast when they were. I can remember seeing those huge animals silhouetted in a breaking wave, sometimes six feet across. I've been a Scuba diver for more than thirty years now and can state that every dive operator keeps ammonia on board just for such an event. The DAN organization (Divers Alert Network) an insurance company specializing in diving medicine and first aid recommends keeping a bottle of ammonia in every first aid kit on a boat.

That yellow poly rope that my Yammie had reeled in that day was an abandoned long line rig with a shorter mono line and big hook every three feet or so.

NEVER GET OUT OF THE BOAT! It's a really good idea to have TWO motors!

JJ
JimMcG
Jungle Jim said:
Lemmie tell-a-you a scary tale...............

So, a few years back just about this time of the year I was trolling a weed and trash line maybe thirty miles off shore when all of the sudden my left side Yammi came to an instantaneous stop. I looked back to see a length of yellow poly rope trailing behind the boat. I raised the motor only to see a solid ball of the shit completely wrapped around the prop causing it to seize up against the lower unit. My Yammies are the long shaft models so I couldn't do anything about it without getting into the water. So, I grab a big knife and jump in. The instant I hit the water I thought I was being electrocuted and being burned alive. I climbed back into the boat screaming and flailing. The wife starts into the full fledged freak mode and we both see the jellyfish tentacles wrapped around my chest, back, arms and thighs (lucky I had swim trunks on). These were big thick ones about the diameter of a soda straw, transparent blue with shiny red, green and blue beads inside. The things were clinging to my skin like glue, I got my saltwater wash down nozzle out and tried to hose em off, no luck, we had to use a knife to scrape em off one by one as they were harpooned into my skin. The pain was so intense that I was getting woosey. We had our trusty spray bottle with ammonia in it and she sprayed my down and scrubbed it in with a towel. Believe me IT WORKED! I'm sure that I didn't have that bottle of ammonia that I would have been dead.

We did have a perfectly functional right side Yammie still running so began our slow run back to PP. When we got to the marina two hours later the guys were freaking out as I now looked like someone had horse whipped me. The stings had turned into lines of raised red welts still burning like fire. I told them what had happened and they were going to call Cruz Roja but I said no. Got back to the condo and took and hour long cold shower that relieved some of the pain. I had to sleep sitting up for the next three days. Saw my Doc here in Yuma was told there was nothing to do but sweat it out and that the ammonia had probably saved my life.

Now, I must say that I have been a beach boy my whole life and back in Newport Beach California in the 60's every lifeguard station had bottles of ammonia handy as treatment for the giant purple jellyfish that would get chopped up in the summer surf and sting the hell out of hundreds of people every day. They never closed the beach when the jellies were there but word got around fast when they were. I can remember seeing those huge animals silhouetted in a breaking wave, sometimes six feet across. I've been a Scuba diver for more than thirty years now and can state that every dive operator keeps ammonia on board just for such an event. The DAN organization (Divers Alert Network) an insurance company specializing in diving medicine and first aid recommends keeping a bottle of ammonia in every first aid kit on a boat.

That yellow poly rope that my Yammie had reeled in that day was an abandoned long line rig with a shorter mono line and big hook every three feet or so.

NEVER GET OUT OF THE BOAT! It's a really good idea to have TWO motors!

JJ

JJ, you should consider assembling your forum contributions into a short essay collection for posterity, seriously, with no sarcasm intended.
Jungle Jim
Thank you Jim, thank you very much..............

You know, I still have my 1970's issue US Army Aviators survival vest with a black leather holster sewn the front and my original issue Smith & Wesson .38 Special Model 10 revolver that we were only allowed to have five rounds in a six shooter, as shown in my avatar. In that vest, originally wrapped in an oiled waterproof envelope is a little manual titled "Jungle Survival". It was handily included along with a K-Bar knife, a radio, some flares, a signal mirror, a whistle, some first aid stuff and a fishing net and some fish hooks just in case our Hueys happened to take a dump over tropical waters. Somewhere in that little gem is some good advise concerning dangerous tropical marine animals to include sharks, barracudas, puffer fish and JELLYFISH. There is a drawing of a Portuguese Man-of-War and a little blurb about pain relief to be accomplished by urinating on the wound.

Anyway, it used to be a requirement to complete a formal instructional class in order to become a "certified" Scuba Diver. I've been a Dive Master since the 90's and regularly assisted with many of those classes. One of the most popular training sessions was always the hazards of marine animals to include sharks of course, then barracudas, Leopard Seals, Orcas and those pesky little mushy stingers collectively grouped as the "Coelenterata". They are the stingers to include Jellyfish, Anemones and certain Corals. The instructors couldn't wait to tell the tales of pissing on the victim in order to relieve the pain, of course the pissing had to be well directed with a pissing device in order to concentrate the piss on the wound. Who is better equipped to do that? Well of course it had to be the guys. What a thrill to work up the class with the opportunity to piss all over someone, especially if the victim is a GIRL! Big deal, they will usually still have their wet suit on.

So, the fact is that anywhere in salt water whether it be warm or cold, the water is usually filled with invisible little stingers, not to mention lots of very visible stingers that only an idiot would dare touch with a bare hand, a knee or elbow. That is why a smart diver always wears an "exposure suit", that may be a wet suit for cool water but most certainly even in warm water should be what is known as a "dive skin" made of thin lycra fabric to protect your skin and some decent gloves to protect your hands.

Oh well, gonna do a Cajun style shrimp boil tonight with last months big Gulf Browns and fresh boiled Imperial Valley sweet corn.

Later,

JJ
Stuart
Jungle Jim said:
Lemmie tell-a-you a scary tale...............

NEVER GET OUT OF THE BOAT! It's a really good idea to have TWO motors!

JJ


Indeed. I jump in when it's dead hot out there, but only after finding crystal clear blue water.

There's some red string-like jelly crap we always seem to get on out lines out at the 51. You're fighting a fish and not paying attention and it goes through your rod eyes and wraps on the reel and then slings onto your hands. I HATE that stuff! Stings like hell and one of the reasons I wear light gloves, even in summer. At times, you look in the water and it's just thick with that red snot stuff!

I always wear a T-shirt when I snorkel for the same reason. Swam into a bunch of sea nettles in San Carlos while snorkeling in a nice, clear back cove. These things are super tiny and invisible, you can't even see them in the water. But you damn well know when you're in in them because they start stinging the bejeezuz outta ya! Not as bad as a jellyfish sting, but will still leave you with some red welts that make you look like you've got a case of the measles.

Two motors, a must. I used to brave it with a single Honda 130 on my old boat, but both and motor were brand new. No guarantees, but a fair level of confidence all would be okay. Those long lines are an absolute bitch. One, they are illegal, but doesn't seem to stop anybody from putting them out there. And they often run for miles, especially in San Carlos. They are one hell of a hazard because they are not marked, other than empty quart oil bottles floating them on the surface. You usually don't see them until you are right on top of them. I've always got an eyeball out for long lines in the summer. Often, another boat will cut them, so then you've got long pieces of them floating at random in the current. If we find a fresh one, I'll often slow troll along it because the dorado will often hang with any of their brethern that are hooked on the long line. The wife HATES IT when I do that, because you really have to watch the line and make sure it's not curled somewhere where you'll run over it. Still, have put some nice size dorado in the box that way. I'd rather find a fat sargasso paddy, but as you know, they aren't always there.
rplarry
Roberto said:
City and state officials canvasing beaches and passing out literature warning about a recent influx of jellyfish.


Any update on the jellyfish situation along Sandy Beach, Las Conchas or Encanto ?

Any reports from those who might be down there now, or have recently been down ?
mis2810
I've seen nothing on Sandy Beach.
Jungle Jim
Did a twenty mile Jeep run on the shores of Bahia San Jorge a week ago...nary a one.

I was planning on finding a few fresh Portuguese Man-of-Wars, bottling them up and bringing them home to slap on the faces of those Antifa retards at their next event in San Diego or Phoenix. The ER doc's would have a hell of a time trying to determine just what was the cause of those nasty painful welts. Probably end up labeling them WMD's.

We did see dozens of Black-Tailed Jackrabbits out there, as along that shore they are genuine "beach bunnies". They are concentrated around the thickets of Pickle Weed that prefers to grow on the mud flats in the upper tidal zone. They have scrapes dug under many of those plants where they take refuge from the summer heat by using the shade of the plant and the damp mud to keep their bellies cool. We saw many tracks heading way out onto the mud where they appeared to be searching out the big clumps of beached Sargasso Weed. Seems odd that a dry land desert vegetarian would seek a marine algae for food. Inland from the beach the landscape is uninhabitable for most critters, just dry dusty salty flats with nothing taller than six inches evident.

We did see a sizeable occupied warren of a colony of the giant Desert Kangaroo Rat out there with many fresh tracks from the night before along with some distinctive Sidewinder Rattlesnake tracks, the kind that bit the beautiful blondie belly dancer from Lobo Del Mar a few years back. In fact their compound is only fifteen miles north from where we were. On that day, she told me that something stuck here in the hand when she was turning a water valve. I took a look at the wound and made a bee line to the valve, coiled up right below it was a small, maybe ten inch Sidewinder Rattlesnake. The events that followed that moment would be a good subject for a good low budget sci-fy film.

So Jerry, waddya think? I'm sure the guys in the RANTS down below will have something to spout about.

JJ
rplarry
Thanks for report JJ and mis2810 !
mexicoruss
Well sort of related....I was coming down the coastal highway from El Golfo today and the truck in front of me ---mind you a very large dump truck was leaking lots of sea water out of the bak and I presume that sucker was full of the big white jellies. The van stunk immediately and I had to was it when I got home. Gross!
mis2810
mexicoruss said:
Well sort of related....I was coming down the coastal highway from El Golfo today and the truck in front of me ---mind you a very large dump truck was leaking lots of sea water out of the bak and I presume that sucker was full of the big white jellies. The van stunk immediately and I had to was it when I got home. Gross!

Those dump trucks having been dropping lots of those jelly fish on the highway at the 4 way to Laguna del Mar on the way to El Golfo. Locals are pissed off about the stench and the hygiene hazard because nobody comes to clean it up. It's pretty gross after they get squished by car tires.
Roberto
Jellies in dump trucks! What is that all about? Going for processing somewhere maybe?
MIRAMAR
No jellies in Miramar this past weekend.
Jungle Jim
I do believe that unless you actually saw what was in those trucks it was NOT jellyfish.

As I wrote above, we were passed by three of those trucks heading south as we were heading north on the coastal highway towards El Golfo. The trucks that passed us and left us hosed down by that grey stinking liquid were filled with rotting fish, namely those of the Croaker family. The crap that still coats my new Ford Raptor is a grey smelly rotting fish oil emulsion. No jellyfish contain oils like that in their bodies, when they wash up on the beach they just dry up into parchment thin nothings, no stink, no rot, nothing, as their bodies are 99.99% water.

If anyone is claiming that the catch is jellies then it's just a lie to hide the obvious FACT that the gill net croaker rape is a full scale current operation with the Mexican authorities being totally complicit.

Oh Brother Where Out Thou?...............you Sea Shepherd foreign tuffies, suckin down those Lysol Margaritas en San Felipe?

Us Vaquitas really do need a little help! We will be the last of our kind and be terminated by the end of this summer.

JJ
mexicoruss
So when the occasional truck loses part of it's load on the road, those big white bulbs that fall out are croakers not jellies?
playaperro
In Spanish we call them agua mala bola de cañón, they are shipped from santa clara to China for there skin.
mexicoruss
jelly fish 2017 2.jpg

The rare upper sea of Cortes' croaker fish being prepared for shipment to China! (sarc on) these are the Jellies being transported in the dump trucks that leak the nasty stuff on the windshield if you are behind them.
Jungle Jim
So Russ.........

Any idea when and where that photo was taken?

On 11 June 17 we stopped at the new Productos Del Mar operation just north out of El Golfo. I walked over to their gate and saw a yellow skip loader with full buckets of various croakers dumping them into open trailers. There were five tractor trailer combos waiting in line to be loaded up. There were photos and a short blurb in one of the Mexican newspapers as well.

So there!

JJ
Seahorse
We also see the dump trucks regularly, they spill on corners at the 4 way at Laguna Del Mar and on the turn about at the bridge coming into town. When a the truck makes the corner....oooooozzzzz comes out of the truck all over the road. We also thought they were jelly fish, but couldn't figure out what any one would want dump trucks full of jelly fish for.
mexicoruss
The foto was taken 2 days ago by a friend who was invited to help process them, he declined
Jungle Jim
In other words: "I don't have a clue"...............

Might be in Havana.

JJ
mexicoruss
Charlie Hall added 2 new photos.
14 hrs ·
Cleaning and shipping jellyfish at the seafood processing center in Puerto Peñasco. They invited me to help but I declined. Somebody eats these!!

image
image

These are the famous Havana Jelly fish circa 1958 at the advent of digital cameras
Last edited: Jun 22, 2017 at 9:27 AM
jerry
Jungle Jim said:
I do believe that unless you actually saw what was in those trucks it was NOT jellyfish.

As I wrote above, we were passed by three of those trucks heading south as we were heading north on the coastal highway towards El Golfo. The trucks that passed us and left us hosed down by that grey stinking liquid were filled with rotting fish, namely those of the Croaker family. The crap that still coats my new Ford Raptor is a grey smelly rotting fish oil emulsion. No jellyfish contain oils like that in their bodies, when they wash up on the beach they just dry up into parchment thin nothings, no stink, no rot, nothing, as their bodies are 99.99% water.

If anyone is claiming that the catch is jellies then it's just a lie to hide the obvious FACT that the gill net croaker rape is a full scale current operation with the Mexican authorities being totally complicit.

Oh Brother Where Out Thou?...............you Sea Shepherd foreign tuffies, suckin down those Lysol Margaritas en San Felipe?

Us Vaquitas really do need a little help! We will be the last of our kind and be terminated by the end of this summer.

JJ

The illegal shrimp harvest was huge down here in may...buy mine at costco these days unless a friend catches them himself ( just bought a kilo of cleaned crab)...the jelly harvest is on and off...big money but inconsistent...I think you are right about the fishing...not a panga in sight here...heard many are up north
playaperro
4500 tons will be processed and shipped to China this year, https://www.facebook.com/1593844820833825/videos/vb.1593844820833825/1941465469405090/?type=2&theater Check out the facebook page.
Last edited: Jun 22, 2017 at 10:38 AM
MIRAMAR
It's sad because "jellyfish also have a number of other natural enemies that like to eat them. These predators include tunas, sharks, swordfish and some species of salmon. Sea turtles also like to eat jellyfish"
mexicoruss
apparently people like them too.
Landshark
mexicoruss said:
apparently people like them too.

I can't imagine being that hungry. But that's just me...
MIRAMAR said:
It's sad because "jellyfish also have a number of other natural enemies that like to eat them. These predators include tunas, sharks, swordfish and some species of salmon. Sea turtles also like to eat jellyfish"

Now those I like!
jerry
A father/soncompany bought the whole harvest of sea cucumbers...selling them to China for aphrodisiacs...heard they tbey down 12000000 peso
Roberto
How do they capture the critters, Jellies and sea Cucumbers. Netting or mano a mano? Pangeros or larger barcas? Its really good for the fisherpeople to have a good market but too bad the controls and regulations are not better too protect next year's harvest and the rest of the sea ecology.
I know that is some places there are fishing collectives that individual pangeros belong to. Anyone know anything about that how it works? I recall that in Kino Ana's abuelo who fished Jaiba borrowed money from his 'boss' against his next catch. Unfortunately I did not inquire how it worked.
jerry
Roberto said:
How do they capture the critters, Jellies and sea Cucumbers. Netting or mano a mano? Pangeros or larger barcas? Its really good for the fisherpeople to have a good market but too bad the controls and regulations are not better too protect next year's harvest and the rest of the sea ecology.
I know that is some places there are fishing collectives that individual pangeros belong to. Anyone know anything about that how it works? I recall that in Kino Ana's abuelo who fished Jaiba borrowed money from his 'boss' against his next catch. Unfortunately I did not inquire how it worked.

Would like to comment but would also like to stay alive....
Roberto
jerry said:
Would like to comment but would also like to stay alive....


Coward, commie, pinko, ratfink . SPILL
mexicoruss
Jungle Jim said:
I do believe that unless you actually saw what was in those trucks it was NOT jellyfish.

As I wrote above, we were passed by three of those trucks heading south as we were heading north on the coastal highway towards El Golfo. The trucks that passed us and left us hosed down by that grey stinking liquid were filled with rotting fish, namely those of the Croaker family. The crap that still coats my new Ford Raptor is a grey smelly rotting fish oil emulsion. No jellyfish contain oils like that in their bodies, when they wash up on the beach they just dry up into parchment thin nothings, no stink, no rot, nothing, as their bodies are 99.99% water.

If anyone is claiming that the catch is jellies then it's just a lie to hide the obvious FACT that the gill net croaker rape is a full scale current operation with the Mexican authorities being totally complicit.

Oh Brother Where Out Thou?...............you Sea Shepherd foreign tuffies, suckin down those Lysol Margaritas en San Felipe?

Us Vaquitas really do need a little help! We will be the last of our kind and be terminated by the end of this summer.

JJ


Cannonball jellyfish from Upper Gulf of California generates important income

By José Antonio Pérez

June 12, 2017. Fishermen families in the Golfo de Santa Clara of the Upper Gulf of California have seen economic revenue of over 21 million pesos with launch of the cannonball jellyfish season, reports SAGARHPA Deputy Secretary of Fishing and Aquaculture, Marco Antonio Ross Guerrero. In the first twelve days of the season, 4,020 tons of cannonball jellyfish had already been captured, valued at 5 pesos per kilogram. He added jellyfish capture does not hinder measures at sea to protect the endangered vaquita marina. Cannonball jellyfish are sent to markets in Asia, indicated the Deputy Secretary, and has extended to the fishing communities of Puerto Peñasco and Guaymas, creating jobs for just over 3,000 people directly among fishermen and processing plants.
mexicoruss
they are probably croaker cannonball jellies.......
mis2810
mexicoruss said:
Charlie Hall added 2 new photos.
14 hrs ·
Cleaning and shipping jellyfish at the seafood processing center in Puerto Peñasco. They invited me to help but I declined. Somebody eats these!!

image
image

These are the famous Havana Jelly fish circa 1958 at the advent of digital cameras


This is exactly what I saw on the road with my own eyes. I've also seen the ad the processing plant puts on the local Facebook job boards looking for processing workers.
jerry
https://www.hakaimagazine.com/article-short/oft-overlooked-jellyfisheries-are-too-big-ignore Good story on it...all and all seems less harmful than most human activity...
MIRAMAR
I don't know how you would capture the jelly fish and not have by-catch.
mexicoruss
MIRAMAR said:
I don't know how you would capture the jelly fish and not have by-catch.

Jellies are generally on top of the water as other animals are under.
Roberto
The jellyfish fishery in Mexico


http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/as.2013.46A009
jerry
http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2011/07/jellyfish-salad-recipe.html
mexicoruss
Excellent article Roberto!