TIME Australia

Thousands Stung After Sudden Surge of Jellyfish on Beaches in Australia

Scenes from Maroubra Beach where prevailing North Easterly winds have pushed mas
Dan Sewell—The Sydney Morning Herald/Fairfax Media/Getty Images Bluebottle jellyfish washed ashore on Australia's Maroubra Beach, Jan. 30, 2006.

More than 2,600 people were treated over the weekend

Beachgoers in Queensland, Australia were in for a shock after strong winds pushed enormous numbers of jellyfish ashore, stinging thousands and forcing the closure of many of the state’s famous swim spots.

The BBC reports that more than 2,600 people were treated over the weekend, while about 13,000 stings were reported over the past week.

Most of the encounters happened in the popular Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast regions.

A sting from the bluebottle jellyfish can be painful, but not life-threatening.

“I have never seen anything like this – ever,” Surf Life Saving duty officer Jeremy Sturges told the Guardian, calling the sudden surge of the creatures an “epidemic.”

Experts said the jellyfish were likely strewn ashore by unusually strong winds.

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