Jellyfish blooms are a consequence of global oscillations [1]

Robert H. Condon, Carlos M. Duarte, Kylie A. Pitt,, Kelly L. Robinson, Cathy H. Lucas, Kelly R. Sutherland, Hermes W. Mianzan, Molly Bogeberg, Jennifer E. Purcell, Mary Beth Decker, Shin-ichi Uye, Laurence P. Madin, Richard D. Brodeur, Steven H. D. Haddock, Alenka Malej, Gregory D. Parry, Elena Eriksen, Javier Quiñones, Marcelo Acha, Michel Harvey, James M. Arthur, William M. Graham
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, January 2013 (online)
UCSB press release [3]
Following is a sample of the media coverage of this study:
CBS News: Jellyfish population booming worldwide; Or is it? [5]
Discovery News: Jellyfish on Boom-Bust Cycle Worldwide [6]
Marine Science Today: Are Global Jellyfish Populations Really Increasing? [7]
Nation Science Foundation, Discovery: Jellyfish "Blooms" Wax and Wane in Natural Cycles [8]
Latinos Post: Jellyfish Population Rise Due to 20-year Cycles: Global Jellyfish Group Report [9]
Featured Summary [10] of this research project
More information [11] about this project's research, participants and publications


