Also called:
doom jellyfish
Related Topics:
box jellyfish
venom

Irukandji jellyfish, any of at least 16 species of box jellyfish (class Cubozoa) known for their transparency, small size, and highly venomous stings. The group is distributed primarily in the warm waters along the northern coasts of Australia, especially in the Coral Sea along Queensland, with some species occurring in parts of the tropical Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans. Irukandji jellyfish are often associated with causing a painful and potentially life-threatening condition called Irukandji syndrome in humans; however, the syndrome is primarily associated with envenomation by the species Carukia barnesi. (For additional information on box jellyfish, including their natural history, see box jellyfish.)

Carukia barnesi

Until the 1980s, it was thought that C. barnesi was the sole Irukandji jellyfish species, so it is the one most often associated with the common name. The species is found primarily in deeper waters down to about 20 metres (about 66 feet) near coral reef habitats along the coast of Queensland and other parts of Australia’s northern coast. Some specimens, however, have been found in inshore waters as far south as the cities of Sydney and Melbourne. Irukandji jellyfish are planktonic. Wind and ocean currents drive them close to the shore throughout the year, but this happens most often during the warmer months from November to May.

The body of the Irukandji jellyfish is a boxlike transparent bell measuring 1–3.5 cm (0.4–1.4 inches) in diameter. A single tentacle protrudes from each of the bell’s four corners, which can retract to as little as 3 cm (about 1.2 inches) and extend up to 1.2 meters (3.9 feet). Each tentacle has several clusters of nematocysts (capsules with tiny poison-filled barbed hooks that can be fired into the bodies of prey). Although the bell is also densely packed with nematocysts, which occur in concentrations of 5,000 per square cm (about 775 per square inch), studies show that venom delivered by the tentacles is more likely to cause Irukandji syndrome, with that of mature individuals being the most potent.

Other species

Several other species of Irukandji jellyfish are suspected of causing Irukandji syndrome. One of the best known is Malo kingi, sometimes known as the common kingslayer or Pseudo-Irukandji. Also found along the shores of Queensland, it is similar in size to C. barnesi; however, the presence of rings of tissue that encircle each of its tentacles distinguishes it from all other box jellyfish. Like that of C. barnesi, envenomation from this species may bring about severe cases of Irukandji syndrome that can result in the death of the victim.

Other notable Irukandji species associated with Irukandji syndrome include C. shinju, which is found along the northern coast of Western Australia and whose morphology is similar to that of C. barnesi, and M. maxima, another Western Australian species whose bell (at up to 5 cm [about 2 inches] in diameter) is slightly larger than that of M. kingi. Several species of the genus Alatina—including A. alata (found along the coasts of Florida, Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and Guam), A. moseri (found near Hawaii), and A. mordens (found near Queensland) are also considered Irukandji jellyfish.

Irukandji syndrome

The pathology was named after the Yirrganydji (or Irukandji) Aboriginal people, whose lands are located along part of the northeastern coast of Queensland, by Australian physician and natural historian Hugo Flecker in 1952. The first description of what would become known as the first Irukandji jellyfish was written in 1956; however, the species would not be formally classified as C. barnesi until 1964, after Australian physician Jack Barnes stung himself, his son, and a lifeguard with the jellyfish on purpose; shortly thereafter, all three developed Irukandji syndrome, thereby proving the causal association between the two.

Irukandji syndrome is caused by venom delivered by stings from nematocysts. The condition may present itself as excessive perspiration, muscle cramps, abdominal and back pain, vomiting, hypertension, agitation, and a sense of impending doom in the patient, or some combination of several symptoms. In severe cases, pulmonary edema, heart failure, and cerebral hemorrhaging have been reported. Symptoms typically begin about a half hour after being stung (the sting itself is mild and often leaves no mark on the victim) and abate after about 12 hours.

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Irukandji jellyfish stings occur most often in the waters surrounding Australia, and the country reports 50–100 cases of Irukandji syndrome annually. Cases of Irukandji syndrome and conditions described as “Irukandji-like syndromes” have also appeared in swimmers and divers throughout the tropics as far away as the northern Indian and central Pacific oceans, the South China Sea, the Caribbean Sea, and even the North Atlantic.

John P. Rafferty
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venom, the poisonous secretion of an animal, produced by specialized glands that are often associated with spines, teeth, stings, or other piercing devices. The venom apparatus may be primarily for killing or paralyzing prey or may be a purely defensive adaptation. Some venoms also function as digestive fluids. The venom poisoning of humans is primarily a problem of rural tropical regions, though it occurs worldwide. Many thousands of human deaths due to venom poisoning occur each year.

Most venoms injure humans only when introduced into the skin or deeper tissues, usually through a sting or bite. Venoms are mixtures of toxic enzymes and various other proteins that act on the body in different ways. Neurotoxin venoms act on the brain and nervous system and can cause either nervous excitation (characterized by such symptoms as muscle cramps, twitching, vomiting, and convulsions) or nervous depression (with such symptoms as paralysis and weakening or arrest of respiration and heartbeat). Hemotoxins affect the blood or blood vessels: some destroy the lining of the smaller blood vessels and allow blood to seep into the tissues, producing local or widespread hemorrhages, while others render the blood less coagulable or cause abnormally rapid clotting, leading to circulatory collapse that can be fatal. Still other venoms produce the symptoms of an allergic reaction, resulting in wheals, blisters, and violent inflammation, often followed by death of tissue and muscle spasms.

Most major animal phyla contain venomous species, but relatively few come into harmful contact with humans. These few include certain snakes (e.g., cobras, mambas, vipers, pit vipers, coral snakes, and rattlesnakes); certain fishes (e.g., stingrays, weevers, spiny sharks, scorpion fish, ratfish, and certain catfish); a few lizards (Gila monster); some scorpions and several spiders (e.g., the black widow and brown recluse); some social insects (e.g., the bee, wasp, and certain ants); and various marine invertebrates, including some sea anemones, fire corals, jellyfish, cone shells, and sea urchins. Snakes and spiders inject venom into their victims with their fangs; fishes use venomous spines and scorpions and many insects use stings.

Lion (panthera leo)
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Venom attacks can range in severity from a simple localized inflammation of the skin to almost immediate death, depending on the animal involved and the potency and mode of action of its venom. An attack’s severity also depends on the victim’s age (children are more severely affected than are adults) and the location of the injury (a venom wound on an arm or leg is usually less serious than a similar one on the head or trunk). See also poison.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Meg Matthias.
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