Monitoring summary, current as of the 2026 season. This is a record of past samples, not a live conditions report.
Sampling in Northern Barnegat Bay has occasionally found clinging jellyfish β 7 of the samples here, usually in small numbers.
Largest single count: 5 Β· most recent detection: 2024
Among the samples with a recorded count, 7 found clinging jellyfish; 70 more samples were logged without a count and are not folded into that figure.
The recorded detections have thinned out in the more recent samples. Sampling effort varies year to year, though, so this is a note about the record, not a verified decline.
Clinging jellyfish are largely a late-spring and early-summer animal here, showing up as back-bay water warms. The biggest single count in Northern Barnegat Bay, 5, was recorded on June 15, 2023, which lands squarely in that window.
Detections here are occasional rather than routine. Still, in late spring and early summer it pays to be mindful around eelgrass and shallow vegetation in this bay.
If you are stung, get out of the water and seek medical care. Reactions to a clinging jellyfish sting can be more severe than a common sea-nettle sting.
For treatment guidance call the NJ Poison Control Center at 1-800-222-1222, or seek emergency care for severe symptoms.
NJ Poison Control: 1-800-222-1222
Northern Barnegat Bay sits alongside Bay Head, Mantoloking, Lavallette, Toms River, and Brick. If you are headed to any of them, the town guides cover the beaches and where to stay.
A note on how to read this page. Each figure comes from individual sample observations collected by Montclair State University and the NJ Department of Environmental Protection between 2016 and 2024. A count reflects what a crew recorded at one spot on one day; many samples were logged without a count, and those are left out of the tallies rather than treated as zero. Areas are grouped from point samples, so boundaries are approximate. Most importantly, the absence of a record is not proof the species is absent. Data current as of the 2026 season.
Source: NJDEP Bureau of GIS / Montclair State University β Clinging Jellyfish Monitoring. NJDEP data layer.
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