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Invasive jellyfish are thriving in Missouri's lakes. What's going on?

Freshwater jellyfish in aquarium, 1998.
Jim Rathert
/
Missouri Department of Conservation
Freshwater jellyfish in aquarium, 1998.

The Missouri Department of Conservation reports an invasive species of jellyfish from China can be found in Missouri’s lakes, reservoirs, and other freshwater habitats.

An invasive species of jellyfish from the Yangtze River Basin in China is thriving in St. Louis region freshwater habitats.

The species Craspedacusta sowerbii, also known as the peach blossom or freshwater jellyfish, are common throughout Missouri’s lakes, reservoirs, and other slow-moving bodies of water, according to the Missouri Department of Conservation.

The jellyfish have been in the United States since 1888. The first one collected in Missouri was in 1930 from a quarry pit in St. Charles County, said Will Mabee, an aquatic animal researcher with the Department of Conservation.

“They've always interested me, just because they're jellyfish, and we're in the middle of the continent. People normally associate these creatures with saltwater,” Mabee said.

 "Freshwater jellyfish have a fringe of up to 400 tentacles lining the edge of their bodies. These tentacles "sting" prey using the same mechanisms as saltwater jellyfish, but they cannot penetrate human skin. Most people can't feel them at all."
Courtesy of Jim Rathert and the Missouri Department of Conservation
/
Missouri Department of Conservation
"Freshwater jellyfish have a fringe of up to 400 tentacles lining the edge of their bodies. These tentacles "sting" prey using the same mechanisms as saltwater jellyfish, but they cannot penetrate human skin. Most people can't feel them at all."

The Department of Conservation suspects the jellyfish could have hitch-hiked on an aquatic plant display over 100 years ago as microscopic polyps.

The size of a quarter, the jellyfish feed on microscopic crustaceans called zooplankton. “If you're looking for something that cues in on them possibly being in a freshwater habitat, look if there is a good population of zooplankton,” Mabee said.

The jellyfish toggles between two life stages: a polyp form and a medusa form. During the polyp form, they are even smaller than a quarter and attach themselves to submerged plants or at the bottom of a lake.

“They are sessile in this stage. So, they don't actively swim up and down through the water column, like the medusa stage does,” Mabee said. In this stage, the polyps form buds that separate and become new individuals.

The polyps transform into a normal looking jellyfish, balloon-shaped with tentacles, when the waters get warmer.

“The Medusa stage in the lifecycle is the actual jellyfish stage,” Mabee said. In Missouri, this stage appears in late July, and will go through early September.

 "There are two separate life phases in freshwater jellyfish. This is the most commonly seen, free-swimming, "medusa" stage, which has an umbrella-like body with a stomach extending downward from the center."
Courtesy of Jim Rathert and the Missouri Department of Conservation
/
Missouri Department of Conservation
"There are two separate life phases in freshwater jellyfish. This is the most commonly seen, free-swimming, "medusa" stage, which has an umbrella-like body with a stomach extending downward from the center."

Mabee said there have been reports of freshwater jellyfish in Lake Ozark, Stockton Lake, Lake Pomme de Terre, Tom Sawyer Lake, and Table Rock Lake, but they are difficult to track.

“They just pop up, you know. They just are there and then they're gone,” he said. “They reproduce asexually by budding. So it would be very difficult to get a population estimate.” Even though the jellyfish are invasive, they are a well established part of Missouri fauna now.

Mabee said they are not a threat to other animals or people, but they are an example of how an exotic species can be easily transported from one place to another and populate a habitat that is not their own.

“We are actively working to control the spread of other invasive animals and plants in the state,” he said.
Copyright 2023 St. Louis Public Radio. To see more, visit St. Louis Public Radio.

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