Extremely Rare Species Of Jellyfish Caught On Camera

Scuba Ventures in Kavieng, Papua New Guinea, shows one of the rarest animal sightings in the world involving a Chirodectes maculatus, an incredibly rare genus of box jellyfish which had only been sighted once before.

 

 

Previously, the extremely rare animal was sighted only once, on the outer edge of the Great Barrier Reef, about 43 km off the coast of northeast Queensland, on 2 May 1997. It was found within 5 meters of the surface, and the biologists who first described it speculated that it may have been relocated to the area by Cyclone Justin.

 

 

Interestingly, that specimen was about half the size of this one, its bell measuring approximately 150 mm in height. Also, as one commenter noted, this specimen from Papua-New Guinea has rings as markings, while the markings in the specimen from Australia published are filled out dots of orange-brown color. Its relatively large size and the extremely venomous nature of some chirodropids, it is assumed that Chirodectes is itself venomous.

 

 

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