News

This Australian man wanted to know what it feels like to be stung by a Man O’War jellyfish. Footage captured at Avoca Beach in New South Wales, shows Jacob Strickling catching a blue bottle ...
The bizarre-looking creature is in fact a sea slug, and feeds on blue bottle jellyfish - otherwise known as Portugese Man O' War. While the jellyfish has a powerful sting that can severely injure ...
The blue bottle jellyfish, scientifically known as physalia utriculus, is common along the Western Australian coastline and its stings can cause pain for more than an hour. The local surf ...
Thousands of bluebottles are seen on Sydney's Coogee Beach with the colourful yet dangerous creatures littering beaches as storms swell across the Australian ... of a blue bottle jellyfish are ...
I don’t want to get in the ocean again if so,' wrote one woman. Blue bottle jellyfish are commonly found on Australian beaches during the summer months and their tentacles are usually between ...
For 200 years, there has been speculation that swimmers could be tormented by more than one species of bluebottle jellyfish. It turns out there are at least four, including one in Australia that has a ...
Sydney – Highly venomous jellyfish have stung more than three thousand people ... bluebottle stings each year on the east coast of Australia, according to the Royal Australian College of General ...
TikTok user @lil_vb_ was filming at Manly Beach, Sydney, as lifeguards instructed swimmers to exit the sea as a swarm of blue bottle jellyfish (AKA the Portuguese man o' war) washed up on the shore.
Hundreds of the poisonous stingers washed up on Bronte Beach on Wednesday, putting swimmers at risk of painful stings. Bronte Beach lies just south of world-famous Bondi Beach and north of Coogee ...