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Japanese Fight Giant Jellyfish Invasion With Jellyfish-Infused Space Candy

BY Ariel SchwartzWed Sep 16, 2009

echizen kurage caramelA raw caramel craze is sweeping Japan. At the same time, fishermen in the Sea of Japan are tormented by invasive swarms of Echizen Kurage (Nomura's jellyfish), a giant jellyfish that weighs up to 450 pounds and measures two meters wide. A group of enterprising students at Obama Fisheries High School (located in the Japanese town of Obama no less!) have brought together these disparate phenomena by developing a sweet and salty caramel made out of sugar, starch syrup, and jellyfish powder, which is produced by boiling jellyfish into a paste and grinding it into tiny particles. The students capture Nomura's jellyfish in fixed fishing nets from a lake in Fukui prefecture, an area plagued by the swarms.

The Obama students aren't content with just producing a a jellyfish caramel treat. The high schoolers have also requested that the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) put the caramels on the menu for astronauts journeying to the International Space Station, presumably in a bid to raise awareness of their tasty solution to the jellyfish problem.

Previous to producing space caramels, the Obama students developed jellyfish-infused cookies, dubbed "Ekura-chan saku-saku cookies." The cookies, sold in boxes of 10, are available at a Fukui prefecture store for 580 yen.

jellyfish net
Nomura's Jellyfish captured in fixed nets

[Via Pink Tentacle]

Topics:

Innovation, Technology, Ethonomics, jellyfish invasion, obama, japan, fukui, jaxa, space caramels, Diver Nomura, Barack Obama, Nature and the Environment, Marine Animals, Wildlife


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Recent Comments | 1 Total

September 21, 2009 at 4:46am by Claire Jennings

ewwwwww, they don't look very pretty! Does the Jellyfish powder actually add anything to the sweet? It sounds as though this jellyfish powder is being used just to use the jellyfish up...

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