While jellyfish years and invasions are not new, and the giant Japanese jellyfish isn'T new as well, naval biologists point out a trend in the oceans that salinity, temperature, ph-level and such are shifting towards value the global ocean has seen at the times before fishes became dominant species in the seas - but jellyfish were. It is a phenomenon that since several years in many different variations has become truly global. Exotic, danegrous jellyfish species that were locked in ecotic waters, enter nordic waters as well that before were cosnidered too cold, and more and mor eoften they could blossom in population iszes much the same way like algas do, and then they bring local fishes to the brink of rigonal exticntion. This problem is growing both in frequency and number of locations. the dfangeorus thing here is that every local ecosystem has a trehshold level beyond which local fish populations cannot recover from being hunted and wiped put - either from man or jellyfish. Like the numbers of local water areas around the globe that are labelled as "dead sea" for all live and oxycgene has disappeared in the past 15 years have increased by a factor of around 20, there is also a global spreading of jellyfish populations, which means both growth in population sizes, and moving of species into before unavailable waters.
Some biologists consider it to be the beginning of a maritime doomsday scenario.
Good old Skybird. Always full of good news.