Jellyfish Lake: Palau’s saltwater pool with a toxic bottom and surface waters brimming with millions of jellyfish

by oqtey
Jellyfish Lake seen from the viewpoint of a camera that is half in the water and half outside. We see dozens of yellow jellyfish in the water.

QUICK FACTS

Name: Jellyfish Lake, or “Ongeim’l Tketau” in Palauan

Location: Palau, Western Pacific

Coordinates: 7.161200817499221, 134.37633688402798

Why it’s incredible: The lake has three layers, including one inhabited by millions of jellyfish and another containing poisonous gas.

Jellyfish Lake is a pool of saltwater on Eil Malk island in Palau that is brimming with golden jellyfish — a subspecies not found anywhere else on Earth. The lake typically houses around 5 million jellyfish, according to the Coral Reef Research Foundation (CRRF) — although there have been years, including 2005, when the number of jellies exceeded 30 million.

Jellyfish Lake is highly stratified, meaning it is separated into distinct layers. Golden jellyfish inhabit the top layer, which extends from the surface down to about 43 feet (13 meters) deep. Between 43 and 50 feet (13 to 15 m) deep, the lake contains pink bacteria that prevents light and oxygen from reaching the bottom layer of the lake, which sits between 50 and 100 feet (15 to 30 m) deep.

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