Jellyfish, Poison Ivy, Superweeds – OH MY!

When I was 12, I joined my friend for a daring swim in the beautiful, albeit jellyfish infested waters of the Mediterranean. Back then, the Israeli coast would get an annual, two-week bout of jellyfish. I wasn’t there long enough to wait it out, so my friend and I jumped in and were undeterred by the mild stings on our bodies. Then, I had an encounter with a jellyfish that I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy – it and I met as I dove under a wave. It, and more importantly, its tentacles, hit my face, leaving a scar that lasted years. (Fortunately, the family I was with knew not to pee on me.) Though painful beyond words, it was a reality of sharing an ecosystem.
But the tides have turned – more and more people are sharing my story. And we have climate change to thank.As mentioned in a recent NY Times article, “(jellyfish) are the cockroaches of the open waters.” Jellyfish thrive in weakened environments. Scientists say that, thanks to climate change and overfishing of jellyfish predators (like tuna), populations of jellyfish are proliferating. Not only are beaches around the world closing, but the New York City Triathletes had to deal with (and one maybe died from) the stings of this maritime beast.
Jellyfish aren’t the only living creatures that are enjoying the CO2 filled, warming planet that humans are creating. Already, populations of poison ivy, superweeds and disease-carrying mosquitoes are increasing, yielding greater incidences of itchy children, resistant weeds and malaria. I am lucky enough to be non-allergic to poison ivy’s oils (so far) and the organic “farm” on which I “work” has minimal weed problems. Still, the spread of malaria scares me – more than half the world’s population lives in malaria infested regions – and you may have gathered that I don’t like jellyfish?
Each of us will undoubtedly feel the ramifications of climate change differently. I am fortunate that I have few to mitigate. Yet, the global poisons of climate change exceed the stings of jellyfish, and it is for those reasons we need to act.










