Imagine you are at the edge of the sea on a day when it is difficult to say where the land ends and the sea begins and where the sea ends and the sky begins. Sea kayaking lets you explore these and your own boundaries and broadens your horizons. Sea kayaking is the new mountaineering.
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Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Odd one out at Belnahua.
Summer 2006 was a prolific year for jellyfish on Scotand's west coast. Some say it is due to global warming, some that it is a result of overfishing. However, giant swarms have always appeared; they drift north feeding on plankton. I have never been able to understand their life cycle. How do they or their polyp offspring get back south again?
In a swarm of thousands of cyanea lamarckii (the blue jelly fish) I spotted this solitary yellow one at Belnahua. Jellyfish reproduce sexually and it is likely to be an albino, caused by inheriting two rare recessive mutations, one from each parent. Albinos are seen in many lifeforms.
Looking south from Belnahua in the Sound of Luing to the mountains of Scarba.
Interesting that it might be an albino variant. In Newfoundland this past summer we were in a small bay teeming with what I took to be several vaieties of jellyfish, all somewhat the same, yet with minor differences. I assumed they were separate species, but perhaps they weren't.
ReplyDeleteAs for returning back to their point of origin, that's a puzzle, isn't it? Perhaps someone will post an answer...
Michael they could be the same species with a common variant such as in the human MCR1 gene which so entrance Wenley.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.onkayaks.squarespace.com/journal/2006/12/9/friday-december-8th-2006-mc1r.html