(deutsche
Beschreibung ganz unten)
Location:
Southern Lagoon, on Mecherchar Island.
Distance from Koror: 18 miles,
30-40 minutes by speedboat.
Visibility:
6’-18’ (2-6m) depending on the tides and weather.
Level of Diving Experience:
Snorkeling only! Ongeim’l Tketau is suitable for every person
who is a capable and calm swimmer, although people with allergies to
jellyfish should consider wearing protective clothing while swimming
among these creatures.
Diving Depth Summary: None
Currents: None
General Information: Jellyfish
Lake, or Ongeim’l Tketau as it is called in Palauan, is one
of approximately 70 marine lakes scattered throughout the limestone
“rock islands” of the southern portion of the main
Palau archipelago. Like most marine lakes, Ongeim’l Tketau is
accessible only by traversing a ridge, which separates the lake from
the surrounding lagoon. The trail is short (less than 1/4 of a mile)
with a relatively steep but invigorating middle section; rope guides
highlight the path and provide added stability on the rocky terrain.
The walk provides an enjoyable introduction to the flora and fauna of
the Palau jungle. In the cool under-story, quiet visitors can often see
skinks and small, harmless, snakes, spot birds in nearby trees, and
with luck, catch a glimpse of a monitor lizard. Interpretive signs help
make the most of this trip through the jungle. Visitors emerge from the
jungle onto a wooden dock (be careful the dock is slippery when wet!)
situated in the northwest corner of the lake and gaze across the lake
to the southern edge. The golden jellyfish (Mastigias sp.), for which
the lake is famous, typically can be seen by swimming out of the
channel in front of the dock and heading toward the center of the lake.
SCUBA is prohibited because the air bubbles exhaled by divers can
become trapped in tissue pockets of the jellyfish, air-lifting them to
and pinning them against the surface, until the trapped bubbles
eventually force their way through the delicate tissue, leaving a nasty
wound. Lake formation: Like all of the marine lakes, Ongeim’l
Tketau, can be thought of as a young lake in an old rock island.
Palau’s remarkable rock islands formed millions of years ago
as tectonic forces slowly pushed coral reef out of the ocean, creating
land with the topographical characteristics of reefs: a complex network
of high ridges and steep faces interspersed with depressions, all
formed of limestone now perforated by channels and fissures. The marine
lakes are the product of the porous nature of the islands in relation
to height of the surrounding ocean (sea level), which, over the last
25,000 years, has changed profoundly in response to changes in the
earth’s climate. During the earth’s most recent
glacial period, approximately 20,000 years ago, vast amounts of water
formed massive glaciers, and, consequently, sea level was 330 feet (100
m) lower than today. As climate warmed subsequently, the glaciers
gradually melted returning water to the seas. Approximately 10 to
12,000 years ago, sea level reached a sufficient height to flood the
channels and fissures of the rock islands, creating marine lakes in
depressions within the islands. (Imagine placing a colander in an empty
sink and then filling the sink with water.) The marine lakes remain
connected to the sea and, on a daily basis, the influence of sea level
on the lakes can be witnessed as the tides rise and fall within the
lakes in response to tidal changes in the surrounding lagoon.
Reef Formation: The lake reaches
100 feet (30 m) at its deepest point; however, plant and animal life
are restricted to the top 45 feet of the lake. Below this depth, the
water lacks oxygen and, instead, contains high concentrations of the
toxic compound hydrogen sulfide, which precludes all organisms that
require oxygen to live, including humans. The hazards presented by this
compound are responsible in part for the ban on SCUBA diving in the
lake.
Marine life: The marine life of
Ongeim’l Tketau differs substantially from that encountered
on a typical dive in Palau and thus provides a refreshing experience.
The golden jellyfish (Mastigias sp.), for which the lake is famous, are
found in great abundance (5 plus million animals) throughout the lake,
often accumulating in spectacular aggregations along the edges of
shadows cast by the mangrove trees that line the lake’s
shore. This tendency to avoid the shady shore, along with a propensity
to migrate, are behaviors the jellyfish inherited from their ancestors,
the other golden jellyfish, Mastigias papua, which inhabits the coves
of Palau’s lagoon. Over thousands of years, evolution has
shaped these ancestral behavioral tendencies to meet the unique demands
of living in Ongeim’l Tketau. So now, every sunny day at
first light, the jellyfish begin a migration in the western basin,
where they overnight, to reach the furthest illuminated edges of the
eastern basin by mid-morning, after which they reverse their course to
return to the western basin by mid-afternoon and complete their one
kilometer long trip. This lake-specific migration keeps the jellies in
the sun and away from the dark edges of the lake where the graceful but
predatory anemone Entacmea medusivora lives, awaiting those individuals
who pass too closely to their extended tentacles. Sunlight is an
essential element in the lives of the golden jellyfish, which, like
reef-building corals and the ancestral golden jellyfish of the lagoon,
derive their color and much of their energy from algae that live in
their tissues. Like all photosynthetic organisms, terrestrial or
aquatic, the algae use sunlight to produce sugars, which they share
with their animal hosts. In turn, the jellyfish provides the algae with
a safe haven from predators, a mobile home that keeps them in the sun,
and a convenient source of essential nutrients in the form of the
metabolic wastes. While the jellyfish are highly dependent upon the
sugars provided by the algae, they are not their sole source of energy.
Indeed, golden jellyfish supplement their diet by using stinging cells
called nematocysts to capture minute animals that live in the open
water of the lake. Thus, just like jellyfish everywhere, the golden
jellyfish of Ongeim’l Tketau do sting. This fact belies the
most persistent myth about these jellyfish: that they are stingless, a
condition said to have evolved uniquely in this lake as the jellyfish
gradually grew to depend solely upon their algae for energy. However,
as the myth of the stingless jellyfish attests, and as thousands of
visitors who have swum among these animals will concur, the sting of
the golden jellyfish is undetectable (except on sensitive tissue like
lips) and no cause for concern. Ongeim’l Tketau is also home
to a large population, one million plus individuals, of a second
species of jellyfish, the moon jellyfish (Aurelia sp.). These
exceedingly fragile carnivores spend most daylight hours in the deeper
waters of the lake feasting upon the same small animals that supplement
the diet of the golden jellyfish. Thus, despite their great abundance,
the moon jellies do not figure prominently in the visible character of
the open waters of Ongeim’l Tketau. Although most visitors
are drawn to the lake by the prospect of swimming among millions of
jellyfish, beyond this unique and spectacular experience, the lake has
more to offer. The curious visitor will find a colorful montage of
sponges, sea squirts, mussels, anemones, and algae living upon the
extended roots of the mangrove trees spectacularly illuminated by the
beams of sunlight that penetrate the thatch of branches above.
Multitudes of small fish called gobies make their home nestled among
these organisms and cardinal fish lurk in the open water just beyond.
Avian life at the lake is also diverse and animated. Spectacular blue
collared kingfishers sit stately and still upon mangrove branches
reaching out over the lake, occasionally breaking their trance to trace
trademark chord-like paths between branches along the shore. Pied
cormorants sit silent and motionless on mangrove branches along the
edge of the lake, periodically taking to the water to hunt small prey
while white tailed tropicbirds and fairy terns monopolize the sky over
the lake and jungle loudly socializing and intermittently plunging from
the sky after the loosely schooled silverside fish that dart among the
jellies. Occasionally a large, solitary fruit bat takes to sky above
the jungle moving among roosts in the canopy.
Diving: As mentioned above, SCUBA
diving is forbidden in Ongeim’l Tketau both because it
damages the jellyfish and because the hydrogen sulfide in the bottom
layer of the lake poses a serious risk to human life.
Fascinating Facts (or answers to
commonly asked questions about Jellyfish Lake):
1. Are there other marine lakes
with jellyfish populations?
Yes, Ongeim’l Tketau is one of at least eight lakes in Palau
that contain large populations of either the golden jellyfish, the moon
jellyfish, or both. However, with the exception of Ongeim’l
Tketau, all are closed to tourism under the Koror State Rock Islands
Conservation Act. Beyond Palau, there is at least one other jellyfish
lake containing golden jellyfish in Kakaban, Indonesia.
2. How do jellyfish reproduce?
The familiar, swimming animal we identify as a jellyfish (properly
called a medusa) is actually one of two very different, relatively
long-lived life stages that characterize the life cycle of most
jellyfish species. The second life stage is the polyp, a minute (only
several millimeters in size), free-living animal that looks somewhat
like a very small anemone - complete with a mouth surrounded by a ring
of tentacles situated on the end of a stalk that attaches the animal
permanently to its habitat. The medusa and polyp life stages are
related to each other in the following way: medusae give rise to polyps
and polyps produce new medusae. The transition between one life stage
and another occurs cyclically in the following manner. Like humans, a
given medusa is either female or male. Female medusae produce eggs and
male medusae sperm. The fertilization of an egg by a sperm produces a
small, round, swimming organism called a larva. Upon maturation, which
takes several days, the larva locates a suitable habitat on the side of
the lake, usually a rock, dead leaf or piece of wood, stops swimming
and settles down on it. The larva then undergoes a radical physical
change, transforming itself from a round, motile ball of cells into a
non-motile polyp with tentacle-surrounded mouth and supportive stalk.
The polyp then lives its entire life attached to that object, using its
tentacles to capture and ingest small animals from the environment
around it. Polyps are reproductively more flexible than medusae (which
can only give rise to polyps via sperm and eggs and a motile larval
stage) in that they can produce both new polyps and new medusae.
Individual polyps give rise to new polyps by producing a small
outgrowth from their body that detaches, swims away, settles on the
bottom and quickly grows into a replicate of its parent, complete with
all the reproductive abilities of its parent. Alternatively, under
certain conditions, a polyp will produce a new medusa by physically
transforming its mouth and tentacle end into a baby medusa, which pops
off, swims away, and matures into an adult medusa. The remaining polyp
then regrows a mouth and tentacles and lives on with the potential to
produce additional medusae and polyps. This somewhat bizarre life cycle
can easily account for the millions of medusae that inhabit the lake.
Reproductively mature medusae produce millions of larva over the course
of their lives-giving rise to millions of polyps. In turn, these polyps
can produce untold numbers of new polyps each with the ability to
produce new medusae. Indeed, in the absence of any predators or other
factors that limit the numbers of either medusae or polyps, such
profligate reproduction is virtually guarantee.
3. How fast does a golden
jellyfish grow?
Best estimates suggest that the bell diameter of a golden jellyfish
increases at about 1 cm per week on average. (The bell is the top part
of the animal that looks like an umbrella.) At this rate, it takes the
average medusa around 2 to 3 months to reach sexually maturity, which
corresponds to a bell diameter of about 7 cm.
4. How long does an individual
golden jellyfish live? Again, it has been difficult to estimate the
life span of the average jellyfish reliably but it seems likely that a
given individual lives about 6 months to a year before dying.
5. Why does Ongeim’l
Tketau lack oxygen and instead contain hydrogen sulfide below 45 feet?
Does anything live there?
Over thousands of years, the bacteria that break down dead organisms
(that accumulate at the bottom of the lake) have consumed all the
oxygen and released hydrogen sulfide into the water. In most lakes,
oxygen is replenished and hydrogen sulfide removed as oxygen-rich
surface waters are forced down to the bottom by wind blowing across the
surface. However, the high ridges around Ongeim’l Tketau
greatly reduce the strength of the wind that blows across the surface
of the lake. This, combined with the relatively deep nature of the lake
and limited tidal mixing, prevents cleansing surface waters from ever
reaching its depths. Now, the only organisms that inhabit the waters
below 45 feet are bacteria that can live without oxygen and tolerate
high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide.
6. Why is hydrogen sulfide
poisonous to humans?
Hydrogen sulfide is poisonous to humans because it prevents the
delivery of oxygen to our tissues, which, ultimately, can kill us. Like
oxygen, hydrogen sulfide is a gas that is soluble in water. Unlike
oxygen, however, hydrogen sulfide can enter our bloodstream directly
across our skin. Once in the blood, hydrogen sulfide binds to our
hemoglobin (the molecule that binds oxygen and delivers it to tissues
throughout our body), which prevents oxygen from doing the same and
leads to death by oxygen deprivation (asphyxiation).
Recommended behavior around the jellyfish:
Jellyfish are very delicate animals whose bodies are comprised
primarily of water (~ 96% of their weight is water) infused throughout
a network of tissue. Thus, water provides virtually all of their
structural support (it is their bones), allowing them to grow large,
and appear robust, without any rigid tissues. The aqueous nature of
these animals leaves them exceedingly vulnerable to damage. Please do
not remove the animals from the water, as gravity, pulling on the mass
of their waterlogged tissues, will stretch and tear them. Try to float
serenely on the surface using slow, gentle fin kicks to propel you
above the animals. Avoid quick actions with both your hands and feet as
you can easily snag an animal in your hands or on your fins
unintentionally tearing or slicing them.
Written by Dr. Laura Martin and Mike Dawson
Deutsche Beschreibung:
Umschlossen von den Kalksteintunneln und –Netzwerke, die die
Eil Malk Insel bilden wie ein geschlossenes System mit einer uralten
Kreatur, deren Larven einst im Inneren gefangen worden waren: der
Qualle. Die Mastigias genannte Quallenart, gemeinsam mit einigen
Mondquallen, leben in diesem See bereits seit Jahrhunderten. Friedlich
folgen sie tagsüber dem Lauf der Sonne und steigen Nachts
hinab zum giftigen Hydrogen-Sulfid-Boden (unterhalb von 60
Fuß, also ca. 18 m) ihres Sees. Ohne natürliche
Feinde haben sie ihre Fähigkeit zur Jagd mit ihren giftigen
Tentakeln verloren und benutzen stattdessen die Algen-Zellen in ihren
pinkfarbenen Körpern dazu, mit Hilfe des Sonnenlichts ihre
eigene Nahrung zu erzeugen. Und Nachts düngen sie ihre
Körper selbst mit den Bakterien in der Tiefe in der unteren
Schicht ihres Sees. Auf der glitzernden Oberfläche des Sees
können Sie mit diesen freundlichen Kreaturen schnorcheln und
durch diesen nicht mehr nesselnden Schwarm hindurch tauchen. Es
fühlt sich an als würde man durch eine Wolke
pulsierender außerirdischer Lebewesen hindurchtauchen, weich,
gallertartig und zerbrechlich. Es ist ein Erlebnis für die
Sinne und ein natürliches Hochgefühl entwickelt sich,
denn alles was man sehen kann, sowohl oben als auch unten sind Quallen.