Cyanea nozakii is found around the coasts of China and Japan. Since the beginning of this century,
Cyanea nozakii has become more common, with mass aggregations occurring. In 2004 this happened in
Liaodong Bay in Northeast China and it was noticed that commercial catches of the edible jellyfish
Rhopilema esculentum were adversely affected. In 2011, a bloom of large jellyfish appeared off the coast of
Qingdao, in what a Japanese scientist had said would be a "non-jellyfish year". Reporting in 2014, the study found that the blooms were likely to be an indicator of worsening ecosystem health. They are linked to variations in sea temperature, increased pollution of coastal waters, overfishing by China, bottom trawling, and the depletion of oxygen levels due to algal blooms. These factors are favouring the survival of the polyp stage of the jellyfish life cycle and thus contributing to greater numbers of the jellyfish medusae. ==Ecology==