Off the wire
Roundup: Number of MERS-infected S. Koreans rise to 9 days after first case  • 1st Ld: China destroys 662 kg of illegal ivory  • Son of mega miner scolds Australian minister for intervening in 4 bln USD trust case  • Senior official in S. China removed from post  • New Zealand FM to tour Middle East ahead of UNSC chair role  • Australian new home sales hits 5-year high in April  • Cambodia rescues another 199 trafficked laborers from Thai fishing boats in Indonesia  • European FTA on agenda in New Zealand talks with Slovak Republic  • Vietnam's HCM City seeks more skilled workers  • Feature: Port project marks new achievement in China-Israel infrastructure cooperation  
You are here:   Home

Box Jellyfish anti-venom closer: Australian scientists

Xinhua, May 29, 2015 Adjust font size:

Australian scientists say they are closer to developing anti-venom for one of the world's deadliest toxins, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported on Friday.

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute spokesman Jason Mulvenna said scientists discovered box jelly-fish venom is similar to snakes and spiders, but also found proteins that were unique to box jellyfish.

"This is the easy bit now we've got to work out what each of these proteins are doing, how it interacts with the body, and how we can abate that effect and help people who've been stung," Mulvenna said.

Due to the venom's toxicity, a senior lifeguard said any anti- venom would need to be accessed in less then two minutes.

James Cook University Associate Professor Jamie Seymour said global warming has extended the box jellyfish habitat.

"Thirty to 40 years ago the length of the season was about a month to a month-and-a-half," Seymour said. "The length of the season now is about five-and-a-half to six months. It's increasing as water temperatures go up."

In Queensland, swimmers are confined to specially designated netted areas as box jellyfish stings cause severe pain.

The box jellyfish has killed 60 Australians so far. Endi