老澳门六合彩开奖记录资料

Skip to content

'Otherworldly' Portuguese man o' war becoming more common on Nova Scotia's inshore

HALIFAX 鈥 With a little help from the warming Gulf Stream, Nova Scotia beachgoers are encountering a strange creature with a balloon-like body whose sting packs a higher punch than that of jellyfish.
cd409f59-cecf-4e1b-8c68-67d469940548
A sign warns of a Portuguese man o' war sighting at Lawrencetown Beach Provincial Park in Lawrencetown, N.S., on Thursday, July 4, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

HALIFAX 鈥 With a little help from the warming Gulf Stream, Nova Scotia beachgoers are encountering a strange creature with a balloon-like body whose sting packs a higher punch than that of jellyfish.

Last week, a Portuguese man o鈥 war appeared at a surfing hot spot on Lawrencetown Beach in Dartmouth, N.S. The animal, a species of siphonophore 鈥 closely related to jellyfish 鈥 has a transparent, inflated sail often adorned with purple, blue or pink markings. It drifts through the water, propelled by currents and wind.

Although there are no concrete numbers on how often the Portuguese man o' war is spotted in Nova Scotia, Sandra Johnston, with the province's Natural Resources Department, said sightings have become more common along east and south shore beaches since 2020.

"(Getting stung) is quite a painful sting. It is just like a jellyfish sting but significantly stronger that lasts around 20 minutes,鈥 Johnston said in an interview.

Boris Worm, a biology professor at Dalhousie University in Halifax who studies marine conservation and biodiversity, called the subtropic creature 鈥渁bsolutely fascinating and otherworldly.鈥

Worm said the rise in Portuguese man o鈥 war sightings in Nova Scotia is likely because the Gulf Stream 鈥 a channel of warm water that flows up the eastern coast of North America 鈥 has become stronger in the northwest Atlantic Ocean and has warmed the south shore of Nova Scotia faster than it has other parts of the ocean.

The Portuguese man o鈥 war live in subtropical gyres 鈥 revolving masses of water that have become home to lots of different organisms. As the Gulf Stream鈥檚 influence gets stronger, tropical and subtropical creatures are being transported further away, all the way to Nova Scotia鈥檚 inshore.

While other jellyfish-related species tend to live in deeper water, the Portuguese man o鈥 war drifts closer to the surface. Its tentacles usually extend a few metres behind it 鈥 in extreme cases they can be as long as 30 metres 鈥 and Worm said their length increases the risk of contact with swimmers.

鈥淵ou could swim without ever seeing the sail or the organisms that could be some 10, 20 or 50 feet away, but the tentacles might still drift behind and sting you,鈥 Worm said.

Other tropical fish making appearances in Nova Scotia from warming waters include butterfly fish, trigger fish and sea horses.

Neither Nova Scotia Parks nor the Nova Scotia Lifeguard Society tracks Portuguese man o鈥 war sightings; Nova Scotia Parks said it issues advisories online and on-site when the creature is spotted. Nova Scotia Health says hospital visits aren鈥檛 tracked by cause, so there鈥檚 no way to know how many people seek care for Portuguese man o鈥 war stings each year.

Atlantic Canada Poison Centre鈥檚 Jill Duncan said the low likelihood of serious injury from these stings further obscures how many people are stung each year. 鈥淭he most common thing that happens when you get stung is pain and red welts in the area that you鈥檙e stung,鈥 Duncan said in an interview.

鈥淚t鈥檚 uncommon to go into a hospital and even (more) uncommon for there to be serious effects and death.鈥

Contrary to the 鈥渙ld wives tales鈥 that urine is an effective antidote to a jellyfish sting, Duncan said, the best treatment after contact with a Portuguese man o鈥 war is to rinse the wound with salt water and submerge it in warm water afterward.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 8, 2024.

Cassidy McMackon, The Canadian Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks